If you have two or more monitors, then Windows only puts the task bar at the bottom of one of those monitors, and although you can move windows to the second monitor, the task bar button for those windows still lives at the bottom of the primary monitor. Switch control between systems either by hotkey or by moving the cursor to the screen edge on one computer for it to appear on the next one.
Input Director supports a shared clipboard — copy on one computer, switch control, and paste. The systems must be networked. Synergy is a software download that shares one mouse and one keyboard between multiple computers. Simply move your mouse between your computers effortlessly. Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Here's what I've found. If you want an app to open on your secondary monitor by default do the following:.
Open the application. Re-size the window so that it is not maximized or minimized. Move the window to the monitor you want it to open on by default. Close the application. Do not re-size prior to closing. It should open on the monitor you just moved it to and closed it on. Maximize the window.
The application will now open on this monitor by default. If you want to change it to another monitor, just follow steps again. I have three monitors at work. It's pretty easy to do. I just leave the program in the window that it's on and close it from there at what ever size i want it and when i restart my computer it is still there.
There can be a problem if he works off a laptop and he docks it on a dock. But if it is a desktop, it should remember which monitor you had it when you closed the program. You can go a step further and add it to the start up menu.
And every time he restarts his computer the program will start and be put in the screen he had it. I do all the time: mail, spark, and our network programs. Check out "Actual Multiple Monitors" - It will give you LOTS of capabilities such as specifying the start monitor for each program, add Task bars to every monitor, specify different desktops for each monitor and so on. The desktops part looks exactly the same as in DisplayFusion so it might be by the same maker. Holding the Windows logo key and the arrow buttons allows you to move a window in the direction it is meant to go.
Pressing the Windows logo key and tapping the letter T allows you to toggle through the applications pinned in the Windows 7 taskbar.
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