üîí Experience Fantastic Privacy Protection with the Fingerprint Lock Screen App! üîí
üöÄ Aman dengan Kunci Sidik Jari Layar! üöÄ
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üîí Rasakan Perlindungan Privasi Fantastis dengan Aplikasi Layar Kunci Sidik Jari! üîí
üîì Secure Your Phone with Screen Fingerprint Lock! üîì
üîë Why Choose Fingerprint Lock Screen for Free? üîë
üöÄ Be Secure with Display Fingerprint Lock! üöÄ
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I'm not 100% about older versions, but in later versions, you can simply goto the top-right of the workspace desktop (where you would access the quick info for Wi-Fi). Click the wrench/settings icon, and then enter settings (you can do this through any method you're comfortable with). Finally, select the "background" icon in settings. Settings window is akin to Windows Control Panel, and going to Display, then Background.
So check if you can goto All Settings, look for a Background or similar option, and changer the lock screen and desktop separately.
I apologize if this does not work on 1.1, but I wanted to mention, Kali may be more difficult or work-intensive, for everyday use, unless your everyday use is fairly simple and you don't mind occasional commands. It is a great distro to begin getting the hang on Linux, to perform tasks and understand the CLI better. But as mentioned, it is not an optimal Linux distro to attempt to use for every day use. Its not really configured for it and you will need to learn certain commands you will commonly deal with.
It still mounts drives and plays files w/o problem, so if you are using it to watch a movie or listen to music and browse the web, it'll with fine. Not optimal, but there's nothing actually "wrong" with doing it. Other versions can be easier to acclimate to though.
Also, GNOME is basically your desktop system. As you found out, changing this option on the lock screen only changes your environment. It does not pertain to the lock screen itself though, in terms of directly controlling it by switching that drop down option and selecting GNOME or anything else. You would need to manually set the bg pic through commands or by searching for settings.
Hope any of that helps a little.