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Living the dual monitor lifestyle.

I loved the SyncMaster 172T so much that I bought another. And once I got my motherboard problems out of the way, I'm happily running a 32MB ATI AIW RADEON and a 64MB ATI RADEON 7000 PCI dual-monitor setup.

One of the really cool features that ATI provides with their drivers is Hydravision support. It lets me run multiple hardware accelerated virtual desktops (up to 9) and I can switch between desktops using their tray icon utility (in theory I can do this using a keystroke but I can't get it to work). The switch is lightning-fast - much faster than the Virtual Desktop Manager utility found in Windows PowerToys. I find that I now use one desktop for email / news stuff, and another desktop for dev stuff (running full VS.NET full screen and debugging a GUI app on another monitor was the main reason I switched to this setup). I suspect I'll use a third desktop for blogging-related stuff.[IUnknown.com: John Lam's Weblog on Software Development]

A picture named monitors.JPGI've been utterly hooked on Multi-Monitor for about a year now.  I have a Compaq Evo N800w at work with an ATI Chipset that supports Multi-Monitor with the external VGA and the integrated LCD pannel.  At home I picked up a single AGP GeForce MX440 with TWO VGA outs for $129 at Fry's.  I'm running a 17" monitor in a corner (because of the depth) and a 17" Viewsonic Flat Screen against the wall.  Once you've lived it, you CAN'T go back.  I'm even thinking about a third monitor at home.

There's a great searchable online database of Multi-Monitor setups if you have any questions about if Multi-Monitor is possible on your system (there are always compatiblity issues with motherboard chipsets, video chipsets, video drivers, etc as John can attest to!)

I FULLY recommend that ANYONE who is using true Multi-Monitor support in Windows (as opposed to the NVidia "giant NView Desktop Fake-out") pickup a copy of UltraMon from RealTimeSoft.  It supports things like: Multiple screensavers, an alternate secondary taskbar for the other monitors, proportional autostretching of wallpaper, roaming profiles, and many other things.  It's a multi-monitor must-have. Full Stop.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2003 10:42:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Three monitors are great -- VS.NET in the middle, all your floating palettes on the left, and the program your debugging on the left (or maybe a technical article or documentation).

Paul Laudeman
Thursday, December 08, 2005 11:12:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
The online fre resource for design, interiors, lifestyle, animals, girls. The public gallery images are free to use as your personal desktop wallpapers.
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