primelasas.blogg.se

Mac os x vmware duel monitors
Mac os x vmware duel monitors








mac os x vmware duel monitors
  1. #Mac os x vmware duel monitors pro#
  2. #Mac os x vmware duel monitors tv#
  3. #Mac os x vmware duel monitors mac#

Up to now, the OS X menu bar was inviolate: There was only ever one menu bar. (If you’re running both an external display and an AirPlay display, you can also opt to have the same screen mirrored on all three of them, or have the AirPlay display mirror either display.)

#Mac os x vmware duel monitors tv#

You can select an Apple TV from the menu, and choose to mirror your current display or extend the desktop. If you’re on a local network containing Apple TVs, an AirPlay icon shows up in the menu bar. Making the connection isn’t much different from how AirPlay Mirroring works in Mountain Lion. While Mountain Lion introduced AirPlay Mirroring-the ability to display the contents of your Mac’s screen on an HDTV connected via Apple TV-Mavericks lets you just treat that TV as a full-on second display.

#Mac os x vmware duel monitors mac#

But if you’ve got a TV and an Apple TV, with Mavericks you can still have an external Mac display. Not everyone has the luxury of owning a display to pair with their laptop or iMac. If you really prefer the old arrangement, you can still choose to have spaces remain constant across your displays, thanks to an option in the Mission Control preference pane. (Yes, Dashboard still exists! It’s gotten only a few new abilities, including a new sparkly effect when you add a new widget and the ability, for the first time, to move it from its leftmost space.) As I swipe from screen to screen on my laptop, the external display remains blissfully still, showing me all my other stuff. I can switch to a desktop view, another full-screen app, or even the Dashboard. When the Calendar app is displaying in full-screen mode on my laptop screen, I can move my cursor to that screen and swipe with three fingers to switch to other views. Meanwhile, my larger external display remains fully functional.Įach screen can have its own collection of full-screen apps and its own sets of desktops. When I drag the Calendar app onto my laptop screen and click the full-screen icon in the top-right corner of its title bar, it expands to fill that screen. What Mavericks will provide is more or less exactly what a multiple-monitor user like me was pining for: Two screens that act independently, each with its own spaces and its own full-screen mode. All spaces encompassed both displays, too, so when you switched between then, the content on both displays changed. If you popped an app into full-screen mode on one monitor, the other monitor went blank, displaying only a stock linen pattern as dark as my heart. These features were nice for people with one screen, but users who work with multiple displays have felt left out. OS X Lion added support for full-screen apps and coalesced all of its window-management features into one place, Mission Control. Mavericks will make using two displays-especially a smaller display the like one you’ve got on a laptop with an external monitor-a pleasure.

#Mac os x vmware duel monitors pro#

But I’ve spent the last few days running Mavericks full-time at my desk on a MacBook Pro (a review unit pre-loaded with Mavericks by Apple) attached to an external display. (And now any TV connected to an Apple TV can be an extra display, too.)įor the last year or so, I’ve been using my MacBook Air at my desk with the lid closed.

mac os x vmware duel monitors

Macs have supported multiple displays for ages, but only with Mavericks do all the workspace-ordering features of Mission Control, including Spaces and full-screen mode, truly take advantage of a second display.

mac os x vmware duel monitors

One of the big additions in OS X Mavericks, the new version of OS X due out this fall, is much richer support for Macs with more than one display.










Mac os x vmware duel monitors