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Virtual Desktops on Windows?

raist_online asks: "After long years of X11 (and recently Mac OS X) I'm now in a job that mandates Windows and uses some Windows-only tools, providing us with XP Pro installs. Using VMWare with dual heads means I can still mostly live in X11-based goodness but I'm really missing a virtual desktop when I have to use Windows. The MS Powertoy doesn't really cut it for me and I've been trying out Cooldesk (some task-bar integration but not behaving well) and altdesk (which is OK but doesn't integrate into the task-bar). I'm really looking for something as simple as the standard X11 pager. Please note that I HAVE to use native Windows for some things so suggestions for Wine / VMWare inside Linux are missing the point. Slashdot, what are your suggestions?"

5 of 121 comments (clear)

  1. Virtual Dimension by no-body · · Score: 5, Informative
    does it for me pretty good:

    http://virt-dimension.sourceforge.net/

    the power toys - or whatever the junk is from M$ - sucks!

  2. Virtuawin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Never really used it, but it might do what you want... http://virtuawin.sourceforge.net/

  3. Re:Virtuawin? Absolutely! by ewhac · · Score: 4, Informative
    VirtuaWin is a mandatory component of any new machine I set up for myself. I have it installed at home and at work, and I use it constantly. Windows is nearly unusable without it. And it's Free Software. Highly, highly recommended.

    Schwab

  4. Re:To better help answer the question... by myc_lykaon · · Score: 4, Informative
    I have use it constantly (at work) for the last 2 years.

    1) It's slow, very slow.
    2) Dialogs (such as VS.NET pops up a dialog when a file has changed) pop up on the visible screen, not on the screen occupied by the parent. You can waste time wondering why your app appears to have locked up - it's just waiting for you to clear a dialog on another desktop.
    3) MS Excel looses all it's toolbars if you flip between virtual desktops.
    4) Some apps don't behave well to being switched and the window contents 'slide' down inside their container.
    5) If an app on one of the other desktops wanders off into the long grass and consumes lots of CPU, it's the devils own job to switch desktops. I find after starting using MSVDM I use taskmgr much more frequently.

    That said, it's definately the best of a bad bunch.

  5. Re:To better help answer the question... by commadore_sponsz · · Score: 4, Informative
    I'm using it at the moment and, whilst it does give you virtual desktops, it has its problems:
    • I have yet to find a way to send windows to another desktop - they stay where you open them. This can lead to dialogue boxes on a different desktop to it's parent program.
    • Some programs don't get on well with it, Excel 2003 loses the tool bars and one of our in-house apps hangs if you change desktop.
    • If a program freezes it will lock things up when you try and change desktop - ctrl-alt-del is the only way I've found to get round this and killing the stuck process can kill explorer and bring everything back to destop 1.
    • It can be slow to change desktops and will often re-arrange the order of windows and their buttons on the task bar when you return to a desktop.
    It's better than no vrtual desktops but not by much. However, it does have the virtue of not showing up on our internal software audit scans as a verboten software install.