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Alt-Tab gives you a grid view of your windows (arrow navigation).
Alt-Windows-Tab takes you previous / next app window. etc.
Brings back pre-mouse days. Like what AI will do to our brains.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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alt+tab I use regularly, rarely alt+Windows key...
diligent hands rule....
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If you can set up the client computer to be an extended desktop where it considers all of your monitors to be one logical device. Then you could connect to your Remote Desktop with a single, triple wide monitor.
You just position your windows in the correct place.
When switching between RDP and physical connected monitors, your windows may end off screen.
Try this old school hack to reposition the active, offscreen window:
Alt+Spacebar
M
Up Arrow on cursor diamond
Move your mouse to reposition your window.
Or right click on the taskbar, Cascade to restack all windows.
Switching between office and home equally has made this a daily routine for me.
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I haven't tried this myself, but I recently learned of Barrier, a software KVM switch.
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That looks like a most helpful thing, as so far I haven't solved my problem. I shall give it a try, thanks.
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I use a powered docking station that allows me to dock my Dell XPS 13 to a pair of, LG 32QN600-B 32-Inch QHD monitors via USB-C. The single docking cable also charges my laptop. And I can use a wireless keyboard and mouse with a USB combo camera/mic.
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What about RemoteApp? This way, every remote window will be it's own window, letting you use your local screens & window management however you like. Including using your local virtual desktops to manage them.
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Real programmers use butterflies
modified 17-Jan-22 9:20am.
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Funny but not funny.
I'm a die-hard Alabam Crimson Tide Football fan. And the national Championship Semi-Final is today.
Joke as a whole is funny, but just ill-timed for me personally.
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she's not funny nor clever.
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The less you need, the more you have.
Even a blind squirrel gets a nut...occasionally.
JaxCoder.com
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Yes, I watch Youtube, yes I don't have an ad blocker, my bad.
Anyway, I thought it was a small price to pay to give a little something back to the channels I watch...
But really, Gaia? Really?
It just happens I was watching this video titled "Why do people think Aliens build the pyramids", and boom I got an ad from Gaia about Ancient Aliens. During that video of all time, wtf is the AI thinking? It's like 7 times this week. Gaia is a paying streaming service, people pay for this sh*t!
OMG! this is even more aggravating that ads for evil political party...
I swear it, the ads on Youtube have become increasingly stupid as of late...
(but, on a positive news, I am happy with the selection of video picked by the algorithm. How strange then, that they pick their ads so badly)
modified 1-Jan-22 1:49am.
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Quote: Gaia, Gaia... Where do we go
Why do you go, and leave me alone
Gaia, Gaia... I want you to know
I couldn't save you all on my own
Gaia...(Gaia)
Bury us all under ice Valensia - Gaia [lyrics] - YouTube[^]
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Here here...
I suggest AdBlock, it's free unless you do premium
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abmv wrote: u could watch random videos once in a while and also subscribe to some random channels
plus you could reset your ad tracker id periodically and set ad to non personalized
How do you do that?
As to ad-blocker, I am not sure whether I tried once and it was suboptimal and I justify myself later, or if I prefer to have ads in order to sponsor whatever I am watching... either way, today, I rather not use ads blocker.
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you can do that from https://adssettings.google.com/authenticated?hl=en
the id reset i think is for the youtube app, so you have to do it their in the privacy settings..
watching random videos and subscribing to random add noise to the algo.
you can have multiple browsers like chrome /chromium and setup ad block on one of them and try not on your main browser if u wish
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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Actually I went back to that page again in a more refresh state of mind. Totally underestimated it originally!
I was able to get rid of the top 2 obnoxious ads, yeah! Might have to study that page gain to remove more stuff!
Thanks heaps man!
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just came across https://freetubeapp.io/about.php not tested could be a test subject
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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Interesting.
As a side note, I am not entirely against ads, since they pay (minutely?) the youtuber.
But ads are becoming more and more obnoxious. As in 2 in a row, longer, and increasingly poor taste - like they purposely target me with things I don't like hoping perhaps, I will finally click them this time!?
(I guess this is the push for youtube red... nut I resisted and subscribe to Nebula instead!)
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In my student days, I read a 3-part article series in one of the ACM publications, I believe that it was Communication of the ACM. In these articles, a couple - both with a high university degree in software development - building a new home decided to automate absolutely everything that could possibly be automated (at that time). The articles described first the design of their basic software and hardware, how it was build in the first stage. Then came the second stage: How to make it absolutely foolproof. If my memory is correct, the second stage cost three times as much to realize as the first stage.
I completed my studies in 1983, and read these articles late in my studies, in the university library copies of the publication, so I never had a hardcopy of my own. The date of publication must have been somewhere from 1980 to 1983.
Does this ring a bell to any of you old timers? Or do you have access to a searchable archive of ACM publications from those years, so you can look it up? I'd really like to pick up these articles again, to see how much home automation has progressed (or not ) in forty years!
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They are still working on the foolproof part. But the universe keeps coming up with better fools.
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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https://dl.acm.org/magazines
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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It's not something I have heard of but the parallels with modern software development are interesting -
I have just spent 27 hours doing software security training and the training was what I would consider "the basics" and language/platform/framework agnostic.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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trønderen wrote: How to make it absolutely foolproof. If my memory is correct, the second stage cost three times as much to realize as the first stage.
I can't remember the full passage in Mostly Harmless, but Douglas Adams wrote Quote: A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools.
He then went on to explain a company's brand new HVAC unit that was so completely foolproof that they sealed all the windows shut. He went on to say that when something that is completely foolproof *does* fail, it is impossible to fix. The inevitable failure of the HVAC unit led to riots.
Anyway, you made me think of that, and then that made me smile. I have nothing to offer in the way of help, other than a gentle suggestion to give Mostly Harmless a read some time, if nothing else because it's funny.
Real programmers use butterflies
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