Hi,
I've just noticed a fleeting reminder, in my system tray, that my logon password will expire in 5 days. This was under the wording (I think) of Windows Logon Reminder.
It appeared in my non-admin account. I have another, admin account.
I have never set Windows to make logon passwords expire. I have never experienced that under my previous install of the same OS, which lasted years. The advice I've been able to google up on the issue all relates to an option in Group Policy to make passwords never expire, but I don't have this, since I'm under Home Premium.
I suspect this may be linked to the way I sysprepped my install, including the logon passwords to my user accounts. Maybe my system thinks I have Group Policy or I'm on a domain, which I'm not. This is a one-user, non-networked computer (except for the Internet).
As a temporary measure, I made both accounts password-free. I also created two password reset "disks" on flash drives, one per account. I discovered, while doing this, that the relevant wizard says explicitely that you can create a password reset disk... with a blank password. Which I did, but what's the point ? Surely, when you have decided not to protect your account with a password, you don't need a password reset disk ?
I've also seen a registry hack to correct this, which I'd like to avoid, if at all possible.
Thanks !
I've just noticed a fleeting reminder, in my system tray, that my logon password will expire in 5 days. This was under the wording (I think) of Windows Logon Reminder.
It appeared in my non-admin account. I have another, admin account.
I have never set Windows to make logon passwords expire. I have never experienced that under my previous install of the same OS, which lasted years. The advice I've been able to google up on the issue all relates to an option in Group Policy to make passwords never expire, but I don't have this, since I'm under Home Premium.
I suspect this may be linked to the way I sysprepped my install, including the logon passwords to my user accounts. Maybe my system thinks I have Group Policy or I'm on a domain, which I'm not. This is a one-user, non-networked computer (except for the Internet).
As a temporary measure, I made both accounts password-free. I also created two password reset "disks" on flash drives, one per account. I discovered, while doing this, that the relevant wizard says explicitely that you can create a password reset disk... with a blank password. Which I did, but what's the point ? Surely, when you have decided not to protect your account with a password, you don't need a password reset disk ?
I've also seen a registry hack to correct this, which I'd like to avoid, if at all possible.
Thanks !
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM)AMD Athlon II X4 640 (3 GHz, 4 cores)Patriot 16Gb DDR3 1600 (2 kits of 2)ATI Radeon HD 4290 (integrated)
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Custom build
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM)
- CPU
- AMD Athlon II X4 640 (3 GHz, 4 cores)
- Motherboard
- Asus M4A 89 GTD Pro/USB3
- Memory
- Patriot 16Gb DDR3 1600 (2 kits of 2)
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI Radeon HD 4290 (integrated)
- Sound Card
- AMD + Realtek HD Audio (integrated)
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Hewlett-Packard ZR2440w (24")
- Screen Resolution
- 1920 x 1200
- Hard Drives
- Internal : Samsung SSD 860 EVO 250 Gb (system), Seagate Barrcuda 1 Tb (data), Western Digital Caviar Blue 500 Gb (archives).
External (USB) : 2 x 1 Tb 2,5" Seagate Barracuda (backups).
- PSU
- Corsair VX 450 W
- Case
- Antec Solo
- Cooling
- Cooler Master Hyper 212 Plus, 2 Nexus Real Silent Case fans
- Keyboard
- Cherry KC 1000
- Mouse
- Logitech M 90
- Internet Speed
- Fiber, 300 Mbit/s down, 200 Mbit/s up
- Antivirus
- Microsoft Security Essentials
- Browser
- Vivaldi, Tor
- Other Info
- BIOS Date: 07/18/11 Ver: 08.00.15.
Modem-router : provided by ISP



