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I stopped using multi monitor at certain point. I just use windows side by side instead. But I'm doing not much visual stuff. Maybe that's why
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@retoor That means u still bought it to begin with. What was it that made u decide to buy it?
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JsonBoa30141yMeetings. I have soooooo many meetings, and having a larger screen in front of me while using my laptop (in a stand up mount) as a second screen allows me to see real work stuff while on a full-screen teams meeting.
Besides, everything gets easier when you can just snap auxiliary information (stack overflow, requisites, WYSIWYG output, slack, teams) on a side screen and keep your main focus on another screen.
Your non-laptop screen doesn't have to be an expensive one, I use an 9-yo 27" TV. -
don’t get a second monitor. you’ll only want more. a third. a fourth. my wife left me.
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I had a MM setup since I started my IT career for, idk, 5 years? I loved the geeky vibe and it was somewhatbeasier to work when I had to multitask and actively monitor the infra events LIVE.
One of my coleagues was an old linux/unix wolf and he didn't use any monitors - only one laptop with the built-in screen. What a psycho..
Now I understand that the geeky vibe is the main thing the MM setup can offer. Multitasking is easy with dmesg notifications, multiple open windows, multiple well-organized workspaces [I always use 9 of them].
Since I discovered the power of workspaces, I no longer need the MM setup. And I no longer use it.
It also keeps me lean and mobile as I do not depend on very speciffic requirements - number of monitors
also, I'm no longer annoyed by spoiled arrangement of the apps' windows each time I [dis-]connect my monitor[s] -
I needed to open browser all the time when I was developing software. Alt tabbing was tiresome.
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The real benefit isn't that you'll get an extra monitor. It's that you'll get a good main monitor and the ability to use a full keyboard, instead of ones that are small and can't be positioned separately.
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I have 3. Usually I have one with my IDE, one with ticket spec, and one with either technical. documentation or, if in a meeting, teams.
Sometimes if I need to compare or copy code or work on a few hughly interconnected classes in different files, I have another IDE window open on the second monitor.
It's just convenience. -
What made me decide to get a second monitor? Gaming.
Game on one screen, on the other some resource open, or a platform to talk with friends, or some chat open, or a YT video.
Then I became a dev and it came in handy.
Code on main screen, documentation or tutorial or a drawing/sketch/plan of whatever I'm coding on the second screen. -
It also comes in handy with my job a lot when there's online classes, but that's only relevant to me.
I have my class open on my secondary screen so I can see if someone raises their hand or looks confused, and my whiteboard or IDE or pdf or whatever I'm explaining on the main screen as a screenshare. I also throw everything I don't want them to see on the second screen when I'm yoo lazy to close stuff and voila, no accidental sleep-ups in class because you shared the WRONG thing. -
Tho if you are going to work with clients last point will also be useful to you. Open them on one screen and whatever you're showing them on the other.
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Draedus6481yUsing 4 monitor as we're speaking. Many people asks me why and the answer is:
I hate windows workspaces ( don't use linux because ... work and older .net not core ) and I prefer having everything at once ( message, discord, spotify, editor, browser, company tools )
I hate laptops from the bottom of my heart. I don't get these tech-fluencers who uses just a macbook because I fucking can't . My eyes, back, arms, legs hurts after 1h of sitting down ( and I'm working 6h a day ) . And working on fly ... fuck no . -
Bibbit7371yFor me, it all boils down to having to alt-tab between windows when a split-screen setup is not sufficient. No way am I going to alt-tab between windows every few minutes.
For me it saves time, prevents context/focus switching, and makes me more efficient in everything I do.
Need to write docs? Open two full-screen windows: one for code and one for docs. Code can be split into more boxes when you have different contexts.
Need to debug? You'll definitely need a full screen window for stack tracing and more, depending on what languages/tech you work in.
Have a meeting or need to present/demo something? Use your second screen to keep an eye on the chat and the cameras while shared content is on your main.
Experimenting with new packages/functions or simply having issues with third-party packages?
Open their official docs/etc in a Web browser on one monitor and have your IDE open in a second one.
Visualizing/tidying data? Have your scripts on main and visuals/tables on the second.
Calling all devs with multi monitor setups.
What made you decide to get another monitor? I am asking because I want to buy one, but can't *really* justify it.
For ref, I have an Asus ROG Strix G17 laptop which has thin bezels, 17.3 inch screen.
P.S. I am aware that I'm using 'rant' tag. Please don't hate me lol.
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