

Some users suggested that changing the region settings to the United States may fix this problem. Lock your device and check if the Spotlight image is different now.After resetting ContentDelivery, reboot your computer.Get-AppxPackage -allusers *ContentDeliveryManager* | foreach.Next, launch PowerShell (administrator).The first step is to go to Settings → Personalization → Lock screen.If the previous method did not yield positive results, try resetting your Windows Spotlight settings using Powershell. Reset Spotlight Settings Using PowerShell It may take up to 30 minutes for the Assets folder to repopulate. Note: Be patient wait 10 or 30 minutes before jumping to the next solution. Lock your screen and check if Windows Spotlight is now displaying new images.

Go back to Settings → Personalization → Lock screen.After you did that, reboot your machine.Rename both these files to and, respectively. Locate and right-click on the following settings: settings.dat and roaming.lock.%USERPROFILE%/AppData\Local\Packages\_cw5n1h2txyewy\Settings.Next, open your Windows Spotlight settings by entering this path in a new Run window:.Delete all the files stored in that folder.%USERPROFILE%/AppData\Local\Packages\_cw5n1h2txyewy\LocalState\Assets.In the new Run window, enter this path:.Then, press the Windows and R keys simultaneously.If Windows Spotlight is selected, change the settings and select Picture or Slideshow instead.Then lock your screen to check if this method solved the problem.Disable this option and restart your computer.Select your network and scroll down to Metered connection.That might explain why the lock screen is stuck on the same picture. If your Internet connection is configured as metered, Windows Spotlight won’t download the images from Bing. Lock your computer and check if the lock screen is still stuck on the same image.Select Lock screen and enable Windows Spotlight.

