Windows 7 Kiosk Mode

Windows 7 Kiosk Mode 9,2/10 6410 votes
Windows 7 Kiosk Mode

Basically it just doesn’t make a lick of sense and should be avoided at all costs. This leaves us with the option of not offering Windows availability due to fear of potential problems with abuse or finding a way to lock things down in such a way as not to allow for any “surprises” with public use of a PC.One of the most common ways of doing this is through something called Windows 7 Kiosk Mode. Not something to be setup without first backing up your computer’s registry, it’s actually not too intensive once you get past the fact that a registry edit is one of the common methods used. With that, here are the steps needed.1) Open up your regedit tool.2) With registry editor open, you’re going to browse to HKEYLOCALMACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionWinlogon3) From this point, go ahead and create a new string with this sequence.

Windows 7 Kiosk Mode Registry

Edit New String Value then add IgnoreShiftOverride4) At this stage, you’ll double click the new value, adding 1 and then hitting OK. Doing this basically adds some security and prevents folks from bypassing the automatic login.5) Still in the same place, next you’re going to add a DWORD to the mix. Edit New DWORD (32-bit) Value then name the new value ForceAutoLogon6) Now double click this new value, type 1 (like before) and again, click OK. This will ensure the PC logs itself back in automagically even if the users tries to log it out. Like magic!From here, just end your registry editor session and you should be good. Try to logout to test things.Locking down the computershared byTo lock things down, you’ll want to take a gander at the tool. While a bit overly complicated, this will give you the tools you need to restrict how the Windows 7 install is setup.

Windows 7 Kiosk Mode

Windows 7 Kiosk Mode Software Free

Windows

If this is too much for you, try and have the entire thing locked down in less than 1o minutes.

More Information. When you run Internet Explorer in Kiosk mode, the Internet Explorer title bar, menus, toolbars, and status bar are not displayed and Internet Explorer runs in Full Screen mode. The Windows 95 taskbar is not displayed, but you can switch to other running programs by pressing ALT+TAB or CTRL+ALT+DEL. Building a Windows 7 Kiosk in 10 minutes An article by Kristoffer 4 Comments Right, so I can’t guarantee you it’ll only take 10 minutes, but after scouring the web for good ways to do it; I ultimately spent less time fixing it myself than banging my head against the desk trying everything I found.

Posted on