If I've set it so that going to the Screen Saver locks me out immediately this is a really handy quick way to instantly go to the Screen Saver and lock your Mac at the same time. If I click it, it instantly goes to the Screen Saver. But I've got this handy link to the Screen Saver engine in my Dock. Now I can close this window and never have to go back there again. Now you could just double click on this and it would run the Screen Saver. That's the actual app that is the screen saver. What you want to do is look for the one just called Screen Saver engine. It will jump and you will see all these core services apps. So the location we're going to go to is System/Library/CoreServices/ and just go into there. This allows you to manually enter in a location. So one way to get to this hidden location for the Screen Saver app is in the Finder here create a new Finder window and then use Go, and Go To Folder.
The way to do that is to go to a special location to find the Screen Saver app itself which is usually hidden from you. If you want an actual button that you can press you can actually add something to the desktop.
You still have five seconds before you lock your computer and have to enter the password again.īut there's another way to do it too. You can set it for five seconds to kind of instantly lock it but also protect yourself if you accidentally move the cursor there and you didn't mean to. Now if you combine this with your Security and Privacy settings to require password immediately then you can use that as a way to quickly lock your Mac. Then you can move your cursor to that corner and Screen Saver starts. So click on Hot Corners here in System Preferences and you can set one of the corners to start Screen Saver. The only way to do it that's kind of standard is use Hot Corners. You want to actually go to Screen Saver mode just as if time had passed and it went there automatically. As mentioned, this is a great way to save battery on Mac notebooks without having to set up a blank screen saver, prevent a bystander from seeing what’s on your screen and more. You can preview it here but that's not what you really want to do. Pressing the shortcut will instantly fade to black both the built-in display and any external screens connected to this Mac and shut off their backlighting. You can go to System Preferences, click on Desktop and Screen Saver and then Screen Saver.
There's no button in the Menu Bar or anything like that. Video Transcript: So let's say you want to quickly get to the Screen Saver. Check out Start Screen Saver With a Button at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.