I haven't used any of the home versions of Vista, so not sure I can be of any
help at all. In the Business version, AFAIK, the Windows-L combination always
locks the system, but I could be wrong about that. One of the first things I
do in configuring any Windows system is to configure it to require
Ctrl-Alt-Del for logon, and to NOT show the previous logon username.
So, understanding my limitations in experience here, the only thing that
pops immediately into mind is a group policy settings. And I'm not even sure
that Home Premium has a GP Editor, but I imagine that it does. If that's the
case, is it possible that that a policy called "Hide entry points for fast
user switching" has been enabled on that system?
If, indeed, you have a Group Policy Editor it would be located by cranking
up the GP Editor (Start | Run | gpedit.msc) then navigating to Local Computer
Policy | Computer Configuration | Administrative Templates | System | Logon,
then looking in the right-hand pane of the policy editor for the above-named
policy.
Other than that, I got nothin'. I'll follow your thread in hopes of learning
something from someone who knows more about this than I do, or in the
much-less-likely-to-happen circumstance that I can think of something more
useful.
"Jason Coon" wrote:
> After installing Vista, I could switch users, but now there is no option for
> switch users in the shut down menu in the start menu.
> Windows-L shortcut doesn't work either, it just goes to the locked screen.
> I'm not sure what broke it.
>
> I've tried a fix referenced in this post
> http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/com...77f9a0&m=1&p=1
>
> but it didn't work. I can't find any control panel options or registry
> settings to enable/disable fast user
> switching. I'm using the release version of Windows Vista Home Premium. I'm
> not joined to a domain.
>
> Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason