First screen for gaming and watching videos (landscape)
Second screen (portrait) Termal and reading documentation
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
First screen for gaming and watching videos (landscape)
Second screen (portrait) Termal and reading documentation
Used to have two. Went back to one. Professionally I feel like 2 monitors is a must ( excl. Laptop ). Or a single big ass monitor.
We've got ( a single ) curved screens at work. It also works because it's wide enough.
Professionally I do believe it boosts productivity. Personally/at home not really ( for me ). It can be convenient if you play an MMO and want to look something up while still seeing the game.
I do have a spare monitor but I disconnected it as I was rarely using it.
I am using only one monitor. It's hard enough to position it to avoid glare from windows and overhead lamps, I cannot imagine doing it with two.
I also have 15 virtual desktops, so there's that.
Creative entrepreneur. Center screen is for whatever I'm currently working on, be that product design, our website, emailing clients or suppliers, research, whatever. Right screen will have relevant reference material for whatever is on the center screen. Left screen is for music controls/discord, but it's also a drawing tablet for any time I need to drop the mouse and start hand-drawing for design work, at which point the music and chat move to the right screen.
I do 'light' software development for a SAAS. I use a single ultra wide. It has PiP settings so I can display my personal if I'd like while working, or have everything displayed on the work side as a triple window or dual window setup. The flexibility is great but overall ultra wides are still niche and a general pain in the ass. Good luck getting any game to run more than 90fps when you're pushing a 5k resolution and 240 refresh.
Embedded software developer here. One monitor, virtual workspaces. Because I don't need distractions.
People in here with 2+ monitors, how do you stay focused? Probably it's just me, but I have a hard time getting into the flow after getting interrupted.
I started using two so I could more easily remote game with my sibling.
The second one would have their screen stream up, so it was like we were playing split screen co-op back in the day. :)
Basically, for all situations, left is communication, center is the application I'm using (game, ide, etc.), right is information (documentation, other resources, guides, or whatever else). What each application is changes based on what I'm working on, but the function is the same essentially always.
Same except opposite for me. Communication on the right, info on left
Teacher here. I have my laptop (16β) and an ultra wide (34β) on my desk, and a projector behind me. I keep my email, attendance, and calendar on the laptop screen.
On the ultra wide, I keep my grade books and various spreadsheets, since more width makes it easier to see more data, and I have my daily agendas/lesson plans. Again, more width makes it easier to see the whole week at once. I keep that fixed to 2/3rds width of the screen, and the other side is reserved for Spotify at like 1/6th width
The projector is used to show the daily agenda, videos, instructions, etc. I very frequently screencast my iPad to the projector, so I can fill out worksheets on it with the class and they can see me write or circle things.
I canβt even fathom having any less screen real estate now. I gotta be able to see it all at once!
Software dev here, and I'm pretty confident that 4 is the ideal number, as long as you have window snapping to split them in half:
Left (inputs): half current ticket, half whatever documentation you need
Main (work): IDE, half test code, half actual code
Right (outputs): half terminal, half web page (frontend) or postman (backend)
Bottom (comms): Smaller laptop screen dedicated to slack / email
Not an IC anymore but my workhorses for the better part of 13 years were 13β laptops. Nice and simple. I donβt get the multiple monitor thing honestly.
I use multiple monitors for audio production. My use case is a bit weird since I code Csound and use a DAW, which is unconventional. It's great for having the DAW up on the 4k, and some code or docs or both on the 1080p, 144Hz. If you didn't guess from the mixture of resolutions and frame rates, I've got gaming covered as well.
Truthfully, the 4k probably has the real estate to do all that on its own, but it was the last monitor I bought and why not use the other? I'm too lazy to figure out a setup to hook up the other 1080s I have lying around. (And don't need the space in any case)
I have 4. My main and second are 46" each, the 3rd. is a 27" in normal/landscape, and the 4th is a 27" in portrait. The main is in front of me, the 2nd. is to the right and angled toward me, the 3rd. faces me at 90 degrees from the main, and the 4th. Is mounted above the 3rd. I used them originally for streaming and all of the windows I had open to monitor everything at the time as well as the game I was playing. Now I find them useful for working on projects, watching videos or movies while I play a game, and working on multiple spreadsheets at the same time. The one in portrait is especially helpful when I'm looking at a season's worth of a scheduling spreadsheet.
One monitor for moodboard, another for materials, tablet monitor for working.
Not a software developer, I just do QA on written documents, and being able to have 3-4 windows side by side is really nice. I usually have 1-2 tracking spreadsheets open on the left, and two documents side by side on the right. I use a laptop at work as well, so sometimes I'll leave it's screen on for email and Teams chat so neither interrupts my work.
spaces > monitors
portability > exactly what I want
At work I have two monitors. One for input (my IDE for programming) and one for output ( the browser to watch changes for my react app).
At home I bought the 49 in. Samsung and have three monitors. Third is normally the log output.
I have two monitors plus my laptop screen. I keep my IDE open on one, my browser open on another, and my terminal open on the last one. It may not boost my productivity a lot each day, but saving maybe a minute every hour adds up.
Itβs much easier to move my mouse to the left than it is to switch windows. When Iβm not at home and I have to code on just my laptop, I do miss the extra monitors.
Two monitors is the absolute minimum, but I think three can be very useful.
On one, I have reference materials, on one I have code, and on one I have the application I'm developing. I think it makes for a pretty good workflow.
Not a software dev but tech is central to my life.
3 monitors for normal use
1 - personal streaming, video meetings
2 - remote business desktop access, main personal browsing window
3 - online chat presence window, personal email client, other
3 monitor gaming
3 monitors for racing simulators and any games that support it (which make sense)
Single monitor gaming
1 - Game related content on left 2 - Game window in center 3 - Game related social media or streaming
3 monitor home labbing
1 machine or app per monitor Triple monitor stare and compare windows GUI / CLI / Monitoring system interface
I didn't realize how extensively I used my monitors until this exercise. Feel better about the spend and space tax related to it.
I'm a 3 monitor person as well. 34" ultrawide as my main with two 24" widescreens side-to-side immediately above it. I use it for work and personal use.
Ultrawide has my main programs for work: internet browsers and job specific programs get about 60% of the real estate on the left, while pdf's, and other less essential programs go to the right 40% of the screen.
The top left monitor gets Teams, Excel docs, or auxiliary browsers.
Top right gets email and media (YouTube, Spotify, etc) or any overfill if I'm dealing with a particularly cluttered job.
For personal, ultrawide is obviously used for games, movies, etc, while top left has task manager, MSI Afterburner, and Throttlestop (I run a laptop). And the top right has Discord.
Loads of data sciency stuff - one monitor for normal text editing/terminal work, another for accessing remote environments, and a third for a combo of work comms and music.
When not sciencing, I won't lie, there's a lot of Path of Exile with PoB on one screen and a podcast on the third.
I have 2 monitors. My primary is ultra wide for gaming and the secondary is discord, Spotify, etc. so I can view messages and stuff without leaving my full screen game.
For work? I just use my Mac monitor like a neanderthal. Idk why but I don't really find multiple monitors helps me work faster.
At my job I use 3 screens. Laptop screen is for Outlook and Teams, the middle screen is for the needed local main application and the right screen is for remote server connections. Having just 2 screens or even only 1 screen would lower my productivity.
At home I'm a single screen user, but its a 4K 28" screen and large enough to hold all my crap.
I do a lot of video editing. 3 monitors all the same size. Right is main edited output. Center is all my editing tools. Left is file management, chat, stock footage, etc.
If I am...
...gaming, I run the game on one monitor and something like a Wiki for said game on the other.
...doing music I have the DAW on the big screen and everything else on the other.
...working I have my focus point (CLI, IDE, SQL Dev, etc) on the small screen and all the noise (e-mail, chat, browsers, etc) on the big screen. Small screen is better for focus.
Three 27" monitors. Right one is portrait, has Slack and music player split screen, left is email or reference material, center one is for doing the actual work.
I work in a customer facing role but also do graphic design, write books, make music, and occasionally code things.
Massive productivity boost. When I work from my laptop I feel like a grandma.
I have three monitors. Middle is an ultra wide with the tests and another window of stuff (the app, data, etc). Right is a 1080 with docs. Left is a 1080 with the code in question.
Iβm a video editor with two 27β monitors. One landscape the other portrait. I used to use both monitors for premiere but found moving the mouse around that much annoying so I condensed all my panels into one monitor and use the portrait one for notes and communication. I feel like I could go back to a single monitor system in the future but I like having two
Single large 48β 4K gang here. Itβs like 4x 24β+ 1080p monitors in a square with no bezels.
Been doing it for years as a sysadmin. Great for documentation and multiple terminal windows. Interrupting programs (email, messengers) on the small screen so they are easy to review but out of direct line of sight.
Small screen makes it easy to screen share with others. They can seen the whole thing at a reasonable size.
3 monitors here, also as a Sysadmin. One for a browser window and tickets, one for side apps like password managers/comms/music/document handling/whatever, and the last is for all the remote desktop-ing I do into various machines throughout the environment.
For leisure I use two monitors for creative endeavors like art and writing. I'll keep the working piece on one monitor and the tools, references, color palettes, timeline, history or science influences, or whatever else have you on the other. At work the secretary has two monitors to view the electronic charting system on one screen and whatever other resources they need on the other (IT and repair tickets, the intranet, incident reports, the staffing schedule, etc).
I also often steal the two monitor setup when they're at lunch to prep the morning assignments because to properly balance an assignment I have to consider lots of different pieces of information that are in a lot of different places for a little under 20 individual patients and 4-8 nurses and nursing assistants (them dayshift staffing numbers turn me green):
Whether any patients are being discharged (more work) - this could be anywhere from the unit summary board to the individual summary to me having to dig through the social worker notes. Sometimes they send an internal email with all the upcoming discharges so I have to open my work email.
Which patients have a sitter (often more behaviorally acute and the sitter has to be let up for lunch and other breaks. This is usually on the unit summary board assuming the assigned nurse checked the correct box in the flowsheets of the individual chart. This is also copied over from the previous assignment sheet but I have to make sure I remove any that the doctor discontinued and add any that were initiated.
Which nurse coming on shift did the least recent admission (if it's their turn and I can't split the patients evenly I'll give them less). This is in a physical admission and discharge register book in a drawer at the secretary's desk.
Who's next shift's charge. Ideally I want to give them less severe patients because they will have extra tasks (like this one). This is on the unit schedule which we can access through an online scheduling system.
Who is coming back from yesterday and which patients they had so I can give most or all of them back. Report will go faster and they will care for the patient more efficiently if they already know them. This is on the previous assignment sheet, but if the patient was admitted during that shift, they won't be on the assignment sheet that was made just before that shift started. So I have to go into the notes and see which nurse wrote their admission note.
Any patient or staff specific conflicts or special situations. This is things like patients that are sex-selectively sexually inappropriate or aggressive (they will behave better if assigned a staff member not of their preferred or targeted gender) or a patient who is super prejudiced and I know they are likely to be abusive to certain coworkers, or a coworker who has had a particularity complicated case for two days in a row and if they get that patient again for day three they'll snap. Sometimes these are in the digital handoff but more often they're passed on in handwritten reports that are shredded immediately after use or passed on verbally to begin with.
So I'm consulting at least four different computer programs and between two and three paper records just to do this one task that I do every shift, and the medical record program does NOT like to share screen real estate.