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I use two. Generally one for VS and one for SQL.
I see Philips now have a cheap 40 " UHD monitor for the same price as their old 28". It has software that allows you you set it up with up to four virtual monitors.
Looks good. I just need to get work to get one as a test
modified 22-Aug-15 16:12pm.
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I will consider this 40" option for myself also.
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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Most have 1 or 2 screens, occasionally 3, and this guy in question has 6.
In my work, my system is so powerful, that it GOES UP TO 11 ![^]
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Terry Pratchett was asked why he had six monitors. His reply: "Because I don't have enough space for eight"
Two is brilliant - orders of magnitude better than one. Three, I'd like to try. Four, I could fit in - just - but I'd need a new video card, which means a new PC as it's only half height. Six? I could use it. I don't think that for what I do, it'd be that much of an improvement - but I didn't think two would make that much difference either.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Hmmm.
*Makes plan about going to the nearest market to purchase a bunch of new screens for system!*
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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At work I have only five on my main machine. It supports six but I don't have room for the other one as I also have my laptop plus another screen to provide a total of seven. ...and I use all of them almost all the time. One for email, one for SQL, two more for VS (sometimes two projects simultaneously), another for remote access to a few servers and I also have to support four different browsers (IE, Chrome, FF & Safari) so I run tests on the other screens and then there's CP, Google and other stuff.
At home I manage on three, across two PCs but with one keyboard and mouse using Input Director (a tool like Synergy).
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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For me, it's not a matter of number of screens, but total real-estate, aka resolution.
I have a 40" 4K TV (3820x2160) and a pair of 24" monitors (1920x1200) on my desk.
The 4K display by itself provides you with a ridiculous amount of space, but I'm not going to give up the two other displays I already had.
There's no going back.
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I am always amazed how people can manage more than one screen. I had 2 for a while at office and never really made any good use of it. I am probably way too much used to Alt + tab and Ctrl + tab.
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Just being able to have Chrome or a PDF open full screen on one monitor, while coding fullscreen on the other makes it soooooo worth while!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I am using 2 (24" - 1920 x 1200) Screens. And it really makes the difference.
I have tried using 3 screens, but that's too much. (Apart from the functional part - You often look stupid when trying to find windows on it )
So IMHO 2 is the right setup. Anything less or more will affect the productivity.
... and 6 - he must be really using his revolving chair instead of alt+tab.
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I use two, and I could make use of a third. I don't think I would like the whole row-on-top thing.
Software Zen: delete this;
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The other advantage of having multiple screens is that when your cat decides to sit in front of one and stare at you (probably plotting revenge for the flea killing liquid I just applied to the back of his neck) you can continue to use the other one...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Does that protect from an angry girl (intending to avenge), too?
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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Unlikely, but perhaps worth a try.
I'd suggest that a bunch of flowers and some chocolates might work better though. Failing that body armour.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I think would find it hard to efficiently use 6. However, I currently use 3, and I do find that I run out of space at times, I don't like having to minimize my windows while working. I would have my IDE on one, my browser one another, and my reference pdf on the third. Depends on what I'm working on I would also use my ssh client, I like to give the old putty a window of its own.
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I use 3 Dell u3011 30" monitors. I would hate to use less. I have one for my current IDE, one for a browser for testing and looking up anything I need on Google or StackExchange, and one for a console or database, depending on the task.
I can't imagine what I would use six for, but I'm not going to argue with someone who likes it - and the geek in me says "I'd love to try it."
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I been using 3 20 inch monitors for 8+.
I used 2 at 1 job wasn't the same, plus they skimped on the size.
I would need 2 minimum.
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I think it really depends on personal preferences. I switched to 2x24 about 3-4 years ago and didn't look back. In this past year I updated to 3x32 - main work area (VS/SQL), communication (email/Skype), and task list/miscellaneous. The two side monitors are in portrait mode. I still ALT+TAB, but I don't have to do that as much. A quick glance to side monitors lets me see what I want without needing to play through the multiple ALT+TAB sequences. It's easy to argue I have WAY too many windows open (I likely do), but it's my working style and it works well for me. Given how cheap monitors are now it's not hard to justify the cost vs. productivity savings. Heck, it used to be $2k for a 19" CRT, so getting 3x32" LED for less than that is awesome. Plus I get a nice tan
Six monitors wouldn't work for me - can't imagine craning my neck upward constantly (I can only imagine the top monitors being useful for monitoring status vs. working desktop space). Six monitors seems overkill to me, but if it actually works for him (vs. him just trying to make his workstation look kick-ass) then who are we to judge?
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I use 4 at home:
Monitor 1 - Code
Monitor 2 - Web Browser (for code)
Monitor 3 - Web Browser (for research)
Monitor 4 - Other (Music, Youtube vids, RDP sessions, log viewing (tail -f), etc)
At work I only have 3 and I can say that i do miss my 4th monitor...
I guess it is one of those things: once you have it you don't want to be without it.
Eric
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Way back before we had personal computers I sat at 6 desks at once. One for my typewriter, one for my adding machine, one for my desk calendar, one for my stapler, one for my pencil cup and one for my phone.
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I've found that two has the biggest impact in regards to improved productivity. It hurts when I have to take the laptop out of the docking station and use it's "small" 17" screen all by itself. Three monitors is nice, but doesn't have the impact of two. Any more than three and I find the additional view space to be distracting.
I can see how having additional screens for monitoring systems might be helpful, but I'd want them to be hooked into another machine rather than a part of my rig.
Scott E. Corbett
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I moved to two screens about 15 years ago. Back then they were both 19-inch CRTs. After working like that for even a couple of weeks, I swore I would never go back to one screen. With flat panels life just got even better, and I now run four screens. Two are 1920*1200 and two are 1600*1200.
My typical layout is:
1. web browser open to the output of the application I'm developing (with other sites on tabs)
2. VStudio
3. View of SSMS, or Oracle tool, or MySQL workbench, or some other data source
4. Virtual console to the server I'm using
My biggest complaint is that every screen you buy these days is only 1080 tall, unless you get some ridiculous piece of hardware. I'm going to keep my collection of monitors until they can no longer be repaired.
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I use 3 on my development box, well really 2.5 since the 3rd ends up much more lightly loaded than the other two. I had 4 at one point - 3 external + the laptops build in screen - but found the 4th ended up getting next to nothing on it and went back to having my laptop closed and the dock under one monitor to reclaim a bit of desk space.
OTOH I could use 4 easily for a systems analysis type task I'm doing on a separate system. 1.5 for an explosion of small windows style UI data source, 0.5 for a word file with notes in text, 1 for a spreadsheet with notes/planning in tabular form, and 1 for the application I'm ultimately sending data to.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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