Dave Taylor

Adding A Password To Mac Screensavers

By: Dave Taylor
December 7th, 2009

My kids are driving me a bit crazy: they keep opening up my MacBook Pro and messing around with it, even when I tell them not to. Since I can't hover over it like an eagle, I need a software solution: how do I require a password to be typed in - to password protect the computer - on either wake from sleep or going from a screen saver to the regular desktop on Mac OS X Snow Leopard?

Dave's Answer:


This is not only a good idea for keeping your kids tamed, but also making sure that anyone else who is not authorized messes with your computer. Personally? I have password protection on all my gizmos, from my Apple iPhone 3GS to my Mac systems to my PC computers. An ounce of prevention, as they say...

The trick is that it's not obvious where on a Mac you find this option. Initially, you might have looked in the "Screen Saver" settings, but that's all about what to show when your computer is idle (though on a PC that is where you can find the 'require a password to wake from sleep' option there, though in Vista it's "on resume, display logon screen").

Instead you need to look in the "Security" area.

Let me show you. First off, click on System Preferences... off the Apple menu on your Mac system. Among other options, you'll see:

mac system preferences security

Now, click on the Security icon and:

mac system preferences security require password

You can see the option front and center, and you can see that I've not only checked it, but also specified that it only kicks in after a minute of idle time. This way if I'm working and, say, on the phone, if the screen saver kicks on I can touch my mouse (or trackpad) and go back to what I'm doing.

If that's insufficiently paranoid to avoid your kids causing trouble :-) then you can also specify "immediately", coupled with tweaking the screen saver settings to have it start up after just 2-3 minutes of idle time. Between them all, assuming you have an unguessable password, you should be safe from their foraging fingers!

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About the Author: Dave Taylor has been involved with the Internet since 1980 and is internationally known as an expert on both business and technology issues. Holder of an MSEd and MBA, author of twenty books and founder of four startups, he also runs a strategic marketing company and consults with firms seeking the best approach to working with weblogs and social networks. Dave is an award-winning speaker and frequent guest on radio and podcast programs. AskDaveTaylor.com http://www.intuitive.com/blog/