

In Windows 8.1 you can also click on your user name on the Start Screen and get a pop up menu that gives you options to Change account picture, Lock and Sign out. Same exact process that exists in Windows 8.1. One method of signing out of your logged in user account on Windows 10 TP is to hit CTRL-ALT-DELETE and select Sign out from the menu. Seems like an easy thing but this is some cheese that has been moved in this early Windows 10 TP build. The tip for today is how to sign out of the Windows 10 Technical Preview. This is the nature of testing out preview versions of software in general so the word of the day as you work in Windows 10 Technical Preview is FLEXIBILITY. However, a caveat is necessary as we explore and re-discover where some features have been moved to and that is it could all change again! "The right to protest is one of the enshrined tools of democracy, but gone unchecked, this is the kind of amendment that may inadvertently embolden other municipalities to implement similar anti-democratic by-laws, and that's a very slippery slope for any healthy and functioning democracy," he added.So are you wondering who might have moved “your cheese” as you explore and poke around in the Windows 10 Technical Preview which became available yesterday? "While Mayor MacCallum continues to resist our calls for transparency and accountability on his still-without-a plan proposed transition to a Surrey Police Service, this amendment paints the completely opposite picture of a duly elected municipal council that was sworn in to act in the best interests of all its residents, and especially through the rule of law." "This amendment by Council would be funny if it weren't so absurdly anti-democratic and near-cartoonish," said Brian Sauvé, President, National Police Federation. This letter not only points out the blatantly unconstitutional nature of this amendment and the inevitable legal challenges that will follow, it rightly calls on the provincial government to step up to defend the rights of all residents of British Columbia including those in Surrey, no matter their views on issues. Minister of Municipal Affairs, Josie Osborne. The National Police Federation is deeply concerned about the motivation, impact, and precedent that this hastily approved political sign banishment sets, and we shared those concerns in a letter sent late last week to B.C.
