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Ask Slashdot: Monitor Setup For Programmers

First time accepted submitter oxidus60659 writes "I currently work as a programmer for a small business. They have provided me with a laptop and a 27" BenQ monitor on a Neo-Flex stand. The problem is that my main screen is the tiny laptop right in front of me. The 27" monitor is on the left at a very different height position. I want to put the 27" monitor directly above my laptop so I'm looking up rather than to the left for all my coding on the bigger monitor. The stand does not have a high enough setting to accommodate this. What would be a good stand that can mount to a desk high enough to be above a laptop? What kind of monitor setup do you use when programming?"

208 of 312 comments (clear)

  1. Shove the laptop to one side by Eunuchswear · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Use a real keyboard, mouse and monitor - why do you need to look at the laptop?

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    1. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      This. ^

      It's a complete no-brainer.

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    2. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Caedite+Eos · · Score: 2

      Use a real keyboard, mouse and monitor

      Yes. Always.

      why do you need to look at the laptop?

      Mo' screenz 's mo' better.

    3. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by maroberts · · Score: 1

      So much of a no-brainer that about 5 of us all posted the same answer almost simultaneously! :-)

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    4. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Claggy · · Score: 1

      That was my first thought too,

    5. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by CityZen · · Score: 1

      In addition, get a stand for the laptop, so that its screen is level(er) with the big one.

    6. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by maroberts · · Score: 2

      If you're doing serious programming, you should use the best keyboard you can, and in most cases a cheap USB keyboard is kinder to the fingers than any laptop keyboard is going to be, thus reducing the risks of RSI and similar injuries.

      By all means leave the laptop open so you can have an auxiliary screen as well as your main screen. Anyway 13" laptop sceens are a joke for doing anything serious, 17"+ laptop screens are the One True Answer :-)

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    7. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by xaxa · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Use a real keyboard, mouse and monitor - why do you need to look at the laptop?

      Not doing this is either illegal, or close, in the UK: http://www.hse.gov.uk/msd/dse/guidance.htm

      Except for infrequent short-term use, a real keyboard and mouse is necessary, and a docking station or stand that holds the laptop screen up to the correct level (top of screen just below eye level, at least an arm's length away) or a separate monitor.

      (I had the annual "watch this video on using computers" thing on Thursday. We all laughed at the poor production and daft people in it, but I think everyone went back to their desks and adjusted something that wasn't quite right.)

    8. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I try to avoid using external kbd for a laptop, cause I want to get used to the kbd on the laptop for those occasions when I have no choice. Also, if I use an external kbd, the screen of the laptop (which is a beautiful 13" FHD screen) ends up further away, and why not use good screen real estate when it's available?

      I have my monitor on a stack of printer paper to get it high enough to clear the laptop screen, so I have only a few cm between the top of the laptop screen to the bottom of the external screen. I can also regulate the top of the laptop screen by tilting it backwards/forwards and align it pretty perfect with the external screen.

      Maybe you should also forgo using a second monitor so you can get used to using the laptop monitor only for those occasions when you have no choice.

      I have a laptop and desktop both at home and at work and regularly switch between them without any problems with the keyboard after a few minutes of typing - one of the laptops is netbook with a smaller than normal keyboard.

      The only keyboard I have trouble getting used to is the rack mounted KVM keyboard in the server room because that one has a non-standard layout for some of the keys.

    9. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The laptop screen is still useful for a secondary monitor - think tool palettes, documentation, log file, etc.

      Just be sure to logically position it to match where it is physically with the DE's display management tools.

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    10. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I was going to say, "if the problem is that the main screen is your laptop screen, then don't have that be your main screen. If you can't figure out how to do that, then you might want to rethink your vocation."

      If you need me screen real estate, buy another screen. This ain't hard

    11. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Exactly. My setup is pretty straightforward. The notebook (Lenovo X230) sits in its dock with the lid closed. I have two monitor arms attached to the desk. One holds a 27" 2560 x something monitor directly in front of me and the other arm holds a 24" 1920 x 1080 monitor in portrait orientation (for documentation) that sits slightly to the right.

      At home, I have a duplicate dock but just my own personal monitors (smaller, but still two of them). The only time you have the notebook open is when you are using it in a meeting, airport, couch, or the like. At your desk it should be closed and driving the external monitors, keyboard, and mouse.

    12. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "It's a complete no-brainer."

      It's only a no-brainer if by that you mean a brain wasn't used in coming up with it.

      This suggestion is not very efficient, and it is not ergonomic at all.

      Looking down at a laptop on your desk is NOT a good, ergonomic working position. Simply substituting another monitor wastes good monitor space.

      The solution? Put the laptop up on a stand next to the other monitor, and use both.

      For good ergonomic working conditions, the top of your monitor(s) should be at about eye level. So place your main monitor at about that level, and raise your laptop up so they are side-by-side. Especially if the laptop has a high-resolution monitor.

      That gives you the maximum screen real estate, AND the most ergonomic setup.

    13. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      If you need me screen real estate, buy another screen. This ain't hard

      Unless you're on a macbook. Which for practical purposes limits you to one external monitor. (Yes USB solutions exist, but so far they suck IMO.) That's for the 2011 mbp - maybe they fixed this shortcoming in the 2012 model?

    14. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly constrained on screen space - 19" external flatscreen and 15" laptop screen. I use both, but when I'm docked, the larger external screen is my primary - you might consider a similar setup. The laptop sits off to my right, and is my "communications/admin" screen - Outlook, Sametime, Rational Team Concert, corporate intranet forums, etc - stuff that's "nice to have available quickly," but which I don't need to have my nose buried in all the time.

      On my main screen, eclipse, PuTTy windows, test browser, xwindows displays, etc. - stuff I'm in and out of all day for development. I've been begging my boss to get me one of the newer flatscreens (my monitor dates back to 2002), but this works passably well for me in a fairly constrained space.

      I know if my boss handed me a 27" monitor tomorrow, that'd be my main screen in a heartbeat.

      But as maroberts also noted - get yourself a good external keyboard, you're doing yourself NO favors with the posture required to look down at a laptop sitting on your desk then up at a giant screen a few inches above it, while typing on that tiny little laptop screen. Give it a few months like this, and I can almost guarantee that you're going to start feeling some tightness and pain in your upper back & neck, and your neck will start "popping" when you make certain movements. I used to have a similar setup (screen low, right at desktop height), and it got to the point where I had a constant headache, my wrists were killing me, and I almost couldn't straighten my neck fully on account of pain. Get yourself into a "natural" position when working, and make sure that your main screen is at a height & position that "neutral" view (head straight ahead, not ducking your head or eyes) gives you the ability to scan the majority of your workspace. If you're working most of your time with your head at an angle, or turned to one side or the other, you're going to regret it eventually.

    15. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I think for the retina display Macs, there are 2 Thunderbolt ports and an HDMI port, so you can go to 3 monitors without doing anything fancy with daisy-chaining thunderbolt.

    16. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Get a contractor to install a bidet for you. Never again will you have to worry about running out of paper.

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    17. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think for the retina display Macs, there are 2 Thunderbolt ports and an HDMI port, so you can go to 3 monitors without doing anything fancy with daisy-chaining thunderbolt.

      Yes - the 650M graphics chipset supports up to four active displays, so you could use three external monitors and still have the laptop screen available.

    18. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Eunuchswear · · Score: 2

      Anyway 13" laptop sceens are a joke for doing anything serious, 17"+ laptop screens are the One True Answer :-)

      17" laptop screens are not laptop screens.

      If it weighs more than 2Kg it's not a laptop.

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    19. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Immerman · · Score: 2

      This, definitely. And rotate the external monitor to portrait mode. Both orientations have their strengths, so why not have both available simultaneously? If you haven't tried it you'd be amazed the difference it makes when you can see an entire function / code block at a glance without scrolling, and I find the lack of clutter from having only a single full-screen program window on the screen more pleasant as well

      My own setup, after several months of adjusting and optimizing is a portrait-mode 21" monitor directly behind the external keyboard at around a 30* easily adjustable tilt. The laptop I put off to the right, behind the mouse and use for the taskbar, tool palettes, message logs, etc. All the random clutter stuff you use mostly the mouse for. Having the two screens at different distances also means you refocus your eyes constantly, helping to keep the muscles in shape, though it can be a little tiring at first.

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    20. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by icebike · · Score: 2

      Anyway 13" laptop sceens are a joke for doing anything serious, 17"+ laptop screens are the One True Answer :-)

      17" laptop screens are not laptop screens.

      If it weighs more than 2Kg it's not a laptop.

      Nonsense. Defining the weight limit for a laptop is above your pay grade.

      17 is quite nice for a laptop, even when most people use them as table tops most of the time.

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    21. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      one really big external monitor is almost certainly better than two medium-sized monitors, though - no gaps, so head/eye movement is reduced.

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    22. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by dreamchaser · · Score: 1

      Anyway 13" laptop sceens are a joke for doing anything serious, 17"+ laptop screens are the One True Answer :-)

      17" laptop screens are not laptop screens.

      If it weighs more than 2Kg it's not a laptop.

      That's just BS. My Precision M4200 weighs just over that and I can use it on my lap just fine. It's a big laptop, but it's a laptop.

    23. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by zippthorne · · Score: 2

      Get something like one of these - dual-arm Ergotron mounting system or equivalent. That one comes with a laptop platform in case you don't have two monitors, and the arms have cable channels, so you should be able to move things around frequently without too much effort or risk of tangling the cables. The screen bracket is on a swivel, so you don't have to stick with the portrait/landscape orientation.

      Only downside is that when switching between orientations, I didn't get a monitor with an accelerometer, so the orientation switch requires a manual change to the display settings. Which is unfortunate if the monitor is the primary one and you don't have a hotkey to swap the orientation.

      Also, it would be nice if the height delta was a little greater, to allow switching between standing/sitting postures, but you can reduce the need for that with a higher desk/chair combo to raise the sitting level closer to the standing level, I guess.

      --
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    24. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      I use 14" laptop for coding. Helps me focus. I used to have huge monitors, but they were distraction. Sometimes it would be nice to have more real estate when debugging, but I've learned not to miss it.

    25. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by stretch0611 · · Score: 2

      17" laptop screens are not laptop screens.

      If it weighs more than 2Kg it's not a laptop.

      I'm 6'11". For me, a 17" laptop is really just that, a laptop. Smaller laptops have never interested me. I do not need to worry about a little extra weight on the laptop and I enjoy the fact that keyboards on 17" laptops are nearly full sized and usually come with a numeric keypad as well. (although, I hate the race for cheapness in all laptops that is making 90% of them with the horrid "chicklet" style keys.)

      As a developer, I will generally spend $1500 to get a good desktop replacement laptop with a 17" screen. Then I will be happy to be able to bring it with me when I have the need.

      Actually, I would even consider a larger laptop, if they had the features I look for when I buy one.

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    26. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Dear Slashdotters, I ran out of toilet paper and need to do #2 soon, what should I do?

      Use the three sea shells.

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    27. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by hibiki_r · · Score: 1

      But the laptop monitor probably has a very different pixel density as the large monitor, so even if you place it at the right height, it'll probably be difficult to use them together.

      When dealing with a worker as expensive as a programmer, getting a second monitor of the right size, or even go all they way up to three, pays off extremely quickly.

    28. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You don't need a completely separate bidet, just go to Lowes and pick up a bidet attachment. Five minutes to install, tops.

    29. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by blippo · · Score: 5, Informative

      First of all, to avoid neck pain, strained eyes and a generally bad posture, keep the top of all your monitors level with your eyes - or lower.
      Looking up will make your eyes blink less often (or not at all) and will make them dry. The neck isn't good at looking up either, and
      a "vulture neck" isn't a chick magnet...

      Use a good separate keyboard and mouse, the best keyboard is the Model M ! Unicomp makes several variants with 104/105 keys and usb. It's awsome!

    30. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      But the laptop monitor probably has a very different pixel density as the large monitor, so even if you place it at the right height, it'll probably be difficult to use them together.

      Nah, I did this for years and it was barely noticeable. One does not overlap windows between screens.

      When dealing with a worker as expensive as a programmer, getting a second monitor of the right size, or even go all they way up to three, pays off extremely quickly.

      Absolutely. The best I've seen is one big 16:10 in the center with a pair of 16:10's vertically on the side. But I don't think there's a laptop that can power this - perhaps one of the new ones with a PCIe port on the side could do it with an external video card box.

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    31. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by ltcraben · · Score: 1

      I 2nd the Ergotron product. I have one with one arm having the laptop stand. This allows me to have both a monitor and the laptop's screen side-by-side.

      --
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    32. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      display port can handle a rediculous amount of screen realestate (something like 4 1080p displays simultaneously) and the laptop shouldn't have much issue if it's being used for work stuff (gaming might be an issue at those resolutions). Most thinkpads have a display port and the splitters aren't terribly expensive.

    33. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Yup. I keep my laptop closed at work. It just can't possibly work any other way. Big screen with readable fonts, versus small screen that I'd have to lean forward to squint at. When it's replaced with a "retinal" display soon it would be even worse.

      I had been considering getting a second monitor like all those other pampered people. But the new laptop can't really support it, only 2 thunderbird connectors and I need one for ethernet. Oh well...

    34. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      I don't use internet, so that I can get used to working during those times when the network is down.

    35. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by realityimpaired · · Score: 2

      The solution? Put the laptop up on a stand next to the other monitor, and use both.

      That's half of the solution. The other half is get used to using the laptop as the secondary display. It's smaller, and should be used for reference information/e-mail/whatever while the big screen display is the one you do your actual work on. That's how I have my desktop set up (admittedly, in this case it's the difference between a 22" display and a 24" display, but it's the same logic). The bigger better display gets used as the main display, and the smaller one that's a bit finicky gets used for information lookup only.

      Also, most book stands make *very* good laptop stands, especially for a laptop in the 13" range where it's not going to be too heavy...

    36. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, the hobbit waifs chime in... I am amazed that you people can actually get out of bed and hold up your own weight. I carry a 12 pound 18.5 inch laptop and want a larger one. But 90% of my programming is in some companies electrical or network closet while I program their building or AV systems.

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    37. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is the us there is no health and safety and people are disposable

    38. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Get a 16:12 one. They're hard to get these days, but the usability is so much better that they're worth it even if you had to pay twice the cost.

      --
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    39. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. Defining the weight limit for a laptop is above your pay grade.

      17 is quite nice for a laptop, even when most people use them as table tops most of the time.

      The term I used for those things is "luggable", and it should be used more often now.

      --
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    40. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      How about use those situations where you have no choice to get used to it? Suffering though crappy hardware just because it is there doesn't seem like a good solution.

    41. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by TENTH+SHOW+JAM · · Score: 1

      I was once offered a development rig with 3 x 24" monitors, and can testify that there IS a limit to the number of screens I am comfortably have. That number is 2 x 24" and 1 x 15" Any more and get disoriented as to where I left that window.

      YMMV

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    42. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Get a 16:12 one. They're hard to get these days, but the usability is so much better that they're worth it even if you had to pay twice the cost.

      So THIS is how they call 4:3 now...

      --
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    43. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Molochi · · Score: 1

      A 17" laptop isn't a "luggable". That name is already used for regular PCs with a case designed for carrying. Think Osborn or IBM Portable PC. Modern Luggables usually encorporate ATX boards or at least allow the use of Desktop Cards, RAID, etc...

      Here's an example...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chassis-plans-mp3x17-fnt-obl-open-1280.jpg

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    44. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      A 17" laptop isn't a "luggable".

      Oh yes, it is!

      That name is already used for regular PCs with a case designed for carrying. Think Osborn or IBM Portable PC. Modern Luggables usually encorporate ATX boards or at least allow the use of Desktop Cards, RAID, etc...

      Here's an example...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chassis-plans-mp3x17-fnt-obl-open-1280.jpg

      There is a difference?

      --
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    45. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to use sea shells.

    46. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to use sea shells.

      Just keep saying "Fuck" really loud and you can get paper from the wall.

    47. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 1

      First of all, to avoid neck pain, strained eyes and a generally bad posture, keep the top of all your monitors level with your eyes - or lower. Looking up will make your eyes blink less often (or not at all) and will make them dry. The neck isn't good at looking up either, and a "vulture neck" isn't a chick magnet...

      Use a good separate keyboard and mouse

      A hunch back isn't a chick magnet either, plus you'll ruin your lower back if you put the screen too low and you have to tilt your head down to read it comfortably. I generally put the top of my screen(s) just a bit above eye height since I only glance at the top (title bar) of my windows and the window manager anyway. That way, I can use the screen real estate that I actually look at often on eye height or just below.

      Keeping a decent font size and not trying to cram as many letters in as possible helps fatigue when working long days behind the screen. I really hate having to work on a 15" laptop that has a 110dpi screen with a secondary monitor that has 86dpi while run MS Windows. No matter what font size you set, you are fucked by the difference in dpi and the fact that windows and it's apps tend to be designed and tested exclusively on 86dpi screens. Layout gets seriously broken if you change the font size and no matter what you try, you can't set a universal font size that will physically have the same size letter on both screens.

      --
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    48. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by maroberts · · Score: 1

      Well I'm typing this on a HP Pavilion g7 which is on my lap, so its a laptop.

      Does everyone need a 17"+ laptops? Probably not
      Do I? Hell yes.
      Is 1600x900 the minimum acceptable display to do coding and DB development? Yep

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    49. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by deroby · · Score: 1

      I've tried 3 monitors for a while and it didn't 'work out'. I think mainly because my eyes/head had to turn too far to go from the left monitor to the right monitor.
      Admittedly, this was with 3 different monitors so not quite the layout as you suggest, but still.

      Anyway, I absolutely agree that going from 1 to 2 monitors is a big jump up in productivity !

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    50. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by andrewa · · Score: 1
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    51. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Since the other popular formats are all 16:x, using a non-reduced fraction looks more readable to me, and makes it easier to compare.

      With the way diagonals of narrow rectangles work, area ratios aren't that far from 9 : 10 : 12, too.

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    52. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by andrewa · · Score: 1

      This is pretty much what I do. However, over time my habits have moved most content over to my 27" monitor and using the laptop screen for things I have to reference on occasion, such as calendars, IM status of my colleagues, etc. Stop worrying about how beautiful your laptop screen is, in the configuration you are hoping for you will ultimately stop regular usage of it. If you have a 27" monitor, then you'll want to keep it a good arms-length away from you, and placing your laptop on a stand will put it at the perfect height for occasional reference. Enjoy your beautiful laptop screen when you're being a road warrior and don't have access to an external monitor....

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    53. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Cool, thanks! Hopefully my job will upgrade me soonish, I'd love to use both of my large-screen displays + laptop.

    54. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Right, but one really big external monitor + laptop screen + big or medium sized external monitor would be even better... Moving my head and eyes doesn't bother me on a horizontal plane - organizing the monitor content correctly makes it efficient.

    55. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Yup. I keep my laptop closed at work. It just can't possibly work any other way. Big screen with readable fonts, versus small screen that I'd have to lean forward to squint at. When it's replaced with a "retinal" display soon it would be even worse.

      Yep, there's yar problem. Right now we are a bit stuck in the gap where nice high-DPI displays are appearing, but the operating system and apps are still not perfect in terms of enlargening fonts and UI elements nicely.

      But the new laptop can't really support it, only 2 thunderbird connectors and I need one for ethernet.

      Heh, thunderbird connector...

    56. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by gravis777 · · Score: 1

      Multi-screen view. Just because you have a 27 inch monitor doesn't mean that you want to have 10 windows open on it, especially if you are doing something like video editing (which the poster said he is doing computer programming, so that doesn't apply). Like I have my 19 inch as my workspace, and my 42 inch television setup as my preview, so I can see what my end-product will look like.

      At work, I have three monitors. They are all about 21 inches, but I have so many programs I have to keep open at once, its a lot easier to tile them across multiple screens.

      Truthfully, I think a 27 inch monitor is overkill for a programmer. It is probably too late to do this, but I would ask the boss if I could trade it in and get two or three 21 inch or 24 inch monitors (I think most laptops will only support 2 monitors - idk, you might be able to do three with a DVI, HDMI and a VGA port). Also, then the laptop won't look so dwarfed next to those monitors, so you could use that as a screen as well.

      But that is not the point of the post, he was asking for advice on monitor stands. If its a 27 inch, just go to Amazon and look up LCD mounts, and you could probably just use a standard television mount. Shoot, the very first choice on Amazon seems to be bracket from Monoprice.

      http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_5_9?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=lcd+mount+desk&sprefix=lcd+mount%2Caps%2C310

    57. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      The awesomeness of a keyboard that one can't try out in person is limited, especially when it perpetuates the Capslock/control stupidity.

    58. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Ya ya, thunderbolt. But Thunderbirds are go... (F.A.B.)

    59. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by dffuller · · Score: 1

      Where's the gross mod when you need it?

    60. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Immerman · · Score: 1

      That does look intriguing. How easily/far does it actually tilt back? One of the key features of my custom made setup is that, while it has no height adjustment, in addition to portrait/landscape rotation I can tilt it back far enough that even though I'm looking down at it while standing, it's still about the same distance away and facing me head-on so it's comfortable to use. Probably wouldn't work well with the wrong lighting though.

      Also, is it safe to assume the range of motion allows you to place the screens at different distances if you prefer? Once I got used to it I found I like having the screens at different distances.

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      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    61. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      The tech specs for the range of motion are listed on the linked page. Tilt requires more force than rotation and moving around, probably because it would generally be set less and you want it to stay, but it is not difficult, and does not require un-screwing anything.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    62. Re:Shove the laptop to one side by Immerman · · Score: 1

      True, and I did read them, but I've found specs on such pages can often be... optimistic. Not to mention lacking in detail. For example 75* of tilt - I assume that's the full range, but it says nothing about where the center point of that range is, and I know TV mounts at least tend to put most of their tilt range into facing downward, which would make it unsuitable. Even an even distribution would be barely adequate for my purposes.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  2. Big book by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I use an old 3000 pages "Java 1.2" book to stand the screen right in front of my head an gets the job done

  3. Um by Jethro · · Score: 1

    Why don't you just put the laptop off to the side and put the big monitor in front of you?

    Definitely use a real keyboard and mouse, too. If your laptop can do a docking station, get one of those (some laptops only have VGA-out on the laptop, but have HDMI on the docking station).

    --


    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is kinky.
  4. Use the Display properties properly by Quick+Reply · · Score: 1

    Not sure what environment you are using, but it should be fairly similar for Linux/Mac.
    In Windows, you can go into the Display Properties and select which to be the primary monitor (which the task bar appears and which Windows open on by default), you can also click on a monitor picture to select it and use the UP/DOWN/LEFT/RIGHT keys to position the monitor relative to the other monitors exactly as it is physically so that the mouse cursor lines up when moving the mouse across monitors and to/from the correct edges.

    1. Re:Use the Display properties properly by pipatron · · Score: 1

      Yeah, uhm, great, but how does this physically move the monitor?

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
  5. Really? by Ziggitz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not usually one to complain about the broadness of these ask slashdot questions, but this one essentially boils down to furniture advice.

    --
    There is no memory shortage. yes I have heard of XFCE. Go away.
    1. Re:Really? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Not even that. Use a small box.

      Peoplr at my work do that too -- put the other monitor up so it's stacked with the laprop monitor. I don't get it. Side-to-side is the way I've been doing it for over 15 years now, home and work.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    2. Re:Really? by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      No kidding. He is a programmer, right? Which typically means he has a combination of books he could use to get to the appropriate height he wants. I did this for quite a while. Now however, at home, I am happy with one monitor. Which conveniently is height adjustable. This guy could do the same if he put the laptop off to the side or in a laptop hammoc on the side of the desk. A 27" at 2560x1440 is pretty comfy. Google/duckduckgo for ars or some other guide... If it was sitting on the desk to the side, when connected, the laptop could become the secondary monitor for GUI debugging, etc, if that helps with his work. But yea this is a rather lame ask /. question. The guy might as well waste his day looking at battlestations or something.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    3. Re:Really? by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 2

      Stacking books to change a monitor's height is actually a health and safety violation in a business environment. Daft, I know. But that's the reality these days.

      Than he can have them buy him a stand.

      But what I would find annoying is an employer that would designate the sole computer for their "programmer", a laptop.

      Sure, I have a laptop at work, but it's not my only or even primary work machine...

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    4. Re:Really? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      "Sorry boss, I didn't know. Well, I have to put it on an ergonomic height, so the only other option is for you to get me that monitor raiser for $$$. Huh? Yes, I'll continue using the book, glad we had that talk."

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Really? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Interresting idea, but don't apple laptops overheat if used with the lid shut? I thought that was the reason they made it so damn hard to disable the "sleep when lid closes" feature.

    6. Re:Really? by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Hey, I don't imagine that the very expensive, premium quality Apple laptops could have such an obvious engineering problems. Instead, I imagine that they would keep ticking stably even if forgotten chucked inside the seam of a sofa for a couple of hours. The heat-conducting aluminum surface and the strategically placed cooling channels will take care of everything.

    7. Re:Really? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      >But what I would find annoying is an employer that would designate the sole computer for their "programmer", a laptop.

      There's no reason to be surprised about using a laptop for primary anymore. There was a time when desktops had powerful CPUs and laptops had the Pentium M. But now, desktops and laptops all feature the same set of processors (Pentium Dual Core, Core Duo, etc.), so there's no reason to not go mobile.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    8. Re:Really? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      The vents is in front of the screen (above the keyboard) and gets blocked when the screen is closed. This has been a known issue since they first came out and Apple's response is "it goes to sleep when you close it".

  6. Ergotron DS-100 Vertical by Crash24 · · Score: 1

    I have a pair of 22" monitors mounted in a vertical configuration using the DS-100 Vertical. It's a bit pricey (I did get it on sale at NewEgg), but it's ridiculously strong and sturdy. You can just install one of the monitor brackets at the top of the pole and have plenty of room for a laptop below. As an alternative, you can try their cheaper single monitor arms.

  7. Simple solution by pswPhD · · Score: 2

    Pick any monitor you wish, then put it on a pile of books. you can get it as high as you wish

    1. Re:Simple solution by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      I use my high school yearbook to raise one of my monitors an inch.

    2. Re:Simple solution by TheSeatOfMyPants · · Score: 1

      I use the ripoff "Dean's List" book my mother bought when I was a college freshman. Best reason for its existence as far as I'm concerned.

      --
      Now mostly at Usenet:comp.misc & SoylentNews.org (it's made of people!)
    3. Re:Simple solution by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      If you can't find books at your office, go grab a few reams of paper from the copier. If your office doesn't have a copier... well, it must be either a broke startup or some hip ultra-modern startup. If it's the former, go poke around out in the owner's garage for something to prop the monitor on. If it's the latter, just have an intern hold your monitor while you work.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
  8. 3 screens ... efficiently. by wallyhall · · Score: 1

    Middle holds the code I'm working on (Notepad2, Delphi, midnight commander or most likely vim - with PuTTY maximised.)

    Windows taskbar sits at the top of the middle screen, as it feels most natural to me... (given I have no choice of OS at work).

    Left of me is usually my inbox or a production monitoring screen, because I have that responsibility too. With web app programming it holds a browser showing the rendering of my latest code probably with the javascript debugger running. Depending on the nature of the code, it might be another PuTTY session with a "tail -f /var/log/mycode" ... because I rarely get it right first time ;-)

    Finally on the right, php.net or Delphi's awesome help files, or even some reference material from stackoverflow (WIN). Slashdot sits in a tab at the back there.

    Most importantly, with 3 screens I've never felt I don't have enough space. My brain can only handle 2 things at once (i.e. code and code output, or stackoverflow and code, or code output and the email I'm copying it into, etc) ... but my brain (personally) gets distracted if I loose something "behind" another. So having that 3rd screen lets me have 3 things open, switching between any combination of a pair.

    I like having them big enough for my poor eye sight, reasonably low brightness setting (with high contrast). Different white balance annoys me, but that's a personal thing purely.

    Finally, they have to be high enough. I'm tall, and I sit upon a gym ball to try and enforce my naturally awful posture. Having the screens a little higher than recommended relieves my neck pain hugely. (Someone will no doubt tell me I'm wrong here! I personally find it works well, judging by how well I sleep at late.)

    A non-distracting wallpaper (solid colour) or a good MacOSX shipped offering and no icons (no, not one!) ... they distract me hugely. And a little tip from myself, have the two on the left/right slightly lower (if your taskbar is at the top, or slightly higher if the bottom) so you can move straight to the start button and system tray and have Windows "corner" your mouse cursor for you (without it flying off to another screen).

    I've met several good programmers who swear 2 is enough, I've secretly sourced and subtly (like a ninja) installed a 3rd screen for them, they didn't even notice for the first few hours. They've all eventually converted.

    It's not about *using* all three, it's about having the room to spread work out, without having to context switch yourself between stacks of windows. Well, at least it is for me.

    --
    I think therefore I am... a Linux geek.
    1. Re:3 screens ... efficiently. by wallyhall · · Score: 1

      I realise I only answered the later of your two questions!

      Forgive me.

      For your laptop/screen setup, if that's all you can have, I'd raise the laptop (stack of books works well) so the top is in-line with the top of your main screen. Put it to the left (or right, whichever feels best) and have your big screen central.

      Your neck will thank you in the long-run. :) (Left/right turns are easier than up/down, I strongly believe.)

      As others have said - get a USB keyboard and mouse (£10 online).

      --
      I think therefore I am... a Linux geek.
  9. get a second desktop monitor. by happyjack27 · · Score: 1

    having two desktop monitors will significantly increase your productivity.
    i have three. they all get plenty of use.

    1. Re:get a second desktop monitor. by Malc · · Score: 2

      Or don't have such a tiny laptop! I have a 17" MacBook Pro, which I realise isn't for everybody, but it makes for an awesome machine in a great form factor. I can work on it productively out of the office and it doesn't break my back cycling to and from work like most equivalent PCs do. In the office it's hooked up to a 24" screen too.

  10. Reams of paper by Dillenger69 · · Score: 1

    If you are in an office setting, reams of paper make excellent monitor stands and are in plentiful supply.
    That having been said. I'd also recommend a real keyboard and mouse with the laptop off to the side.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  11. Get yourself a copy of Winplit Revolution by second_coming · · Score: 1

    http://winsplit-revolution.com/

    Makes working with a large screen and multiple windows so much nicer.

    1. Re:Get yourself a copy of Winplit Revolution by mrvan · · Score: 2

      Or get a "real" os with tiling window management. I am using xubuntu+xmonad and it is the best thing since electronic transistors!

    2. Re:Get yourself a copy of Winplit Revolution by second_coming · · Score: 1

      What constitutes a real OS then? Or are you just trolling?

    3. Re:Get yourself a copy of Winplit Revolution by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Hey, he's just a nerd. The weirder and more specialized Linux desktop you have, the better.

  12. A big monitor and ... by MpVpRb · · Score: 1

    I use a big (30" 2560x1600) monitor, a standard keyboard and mouse, and a tower computer box on the floor

    When I absolutely must be mobile, I use a laptop

    I despise the thing, and try very hard to avoid it

    1. Re:A big monitor and ... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Sadly that's not always an option.

      Some of us have to be mobile and it's not always easy to convince a boss that you really need two different machines. Hell, it's already difficult to convince most bosses that the laptop screen is no suitable substitute for a real monitor.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  13. personal preference by updatelee · · Score: 1

    I used to develop software for a living now I just do it for fun.

    I used to use a laptop as well because I was to and from the office alot, probably 40% office, 40% home, and 20% elsewhere. I only actually used the laptop keyboard/video/mouse when I wasnt at home or office though. The rest of the time It was defn far better to have a full sized quality keyboard/mouse and two monitors.

    One screen was for the IDE and the other is where the application ran, I found it alot easier to debug with this setup. But its personal preference.

    There are literally wall mounts everywhere now days, all screens are VESA compatible mounts now days. You can goto walmart and buy them even.

    UDL

    1. Re:personal preference by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      There are literally wall mounts everywhere now days, all screens are VESA compatible mounts now days.

      Not really. There's plenty of monitors on the market which do not have any kind of wall mounting mechanism. (On the other hand, finding a VESA mountable display is very easy, too.)

  14. No-brainer. Got same problem, solved it thusly: by vikingpower · · Score: 1
    1) set up your laptop to show the Desktop on the large screen

    1a) important screens ( code, compiler, text to read from screen ) on the large one, unimportant ones ( logs, system perf monitors, whatever ) on the laptop

    2) use a real keyboard and mouse

    3) you will work on the large, main screen, and watch occasionally to your right for logs, sys perfs etc.

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  15. Benq? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Why do you have to name the brand of the monitor?

    1. Re:Benq? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's not a slashvertisement if it doesn't pimp a brand!

      -- Sent from my Apple iPad

  16. Setup by Horshu · · Score: 1

    At home, I have a single 24", but I am about to go a more ideal two 24's. I consider that ideal because I am not programming full speed, and I have a television to the side as a "3rd" monitor.
    At work, I have two 19" screens, but my preference would be three of them (preferably with a single widescreen), so that I have an IDE window, a debugging window to play the app, and then a third screen for browsing or other OS-packaged apps.

  17. 2 reams of paper by jdkc4d · · Score: 1

    What Kind of neo flex stand? Is it one where it only holds the monitor, or does it hold the laptop too? If it only holds the monitor, just put a couple reams of paper under the stand. Every office has a few of those laying around.

  18. Multiple monitors by karnowski · · Score: 1

    In my current job I have four 20 inch monitors in a 2x2 square. Active apps (Eclipse and browser) go in the bottom two. Less active apps (email and SQL client) up the top. It will be very hard for me to go back to one or two monitors. If an employer isn't willing to provide your most productive set up then it's a sign to keep away from them.

  19. Rotate your monitors by Coryoth · · Score: 1

    I got provided with 2 24" widescreen monitors, which gives pemty of screen real-estate, but makes for very wide anglew viewing. After a period of frustration with panning my eyes across the width of them I realised I could orient them vertically since they were on rotatable mounts. This turned out to be great -- the extra height fits more lines of code on screen at a time, and works nicely dual screen. I reccomend such a setup to anyone.

    1. Re:Rotate your monitors by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Do you use sub-pixel anti-aliasing? On Windows, many of the newer fonts (Segoe, Calibri/etc.) have been optimized for use with ClearType -- I'm curious how well these look when the sub-pixels are stacked vertically.

    2. Re:Rotate your monitors by RR · · Score: 1

      On Windows, it's horrible because ClearType doesn't respect rotated pixels. So, it keeps the color fringes on the sides, and it acts as a colorful whole-pixel anti-aliasing instead of proper sub-pixel rendering. Furthermore, in most applications, it's impossible to have anti-aliasing without color fringes, with Internet Explorer having its own uniquely distracting sub-pixel rendering. Even with color fringes, I prefer having some anti-aliasing to having none, so I put up with it.

      This is why I switched to Firefox for my reading. I installed the Anti-Aliasing Tuner extension in Firefox, and set its anti-aliasing mode to greyscale. Now my text is not quite as sharp, but it doesn't have distracting colors at the sides. With a big screen, I can increase the font size, reducing eye strain and making the blurriness irrelevant.

      I'm curious about how MacOS X and Freetype handle vertical sub-pixels.

      --
      Have a nice time.
    3. Re:Rotate your monitors by bored · · Score: 1

      Well the cleartype tuner can fix problems when cleartype gets the subpixel layout wrong (cause you rotated the monitor or whatnot). But it never seems to work correctly when multiple tune settings are required for multi head configurations.

      Or you know, just turn it off, that gets rid of all the rainbow colored text too. Cleartype, even when its working correctly reminds me of the bad old days of poorly constructed apple II fonts. So I turn it off as much as possible. If MS spent half the effort getting the OEMs to ship computers with decent screens they spent trying to make those crappy screens usable the world would be a better place.

  20. Be thankful if you DON'T need a KVM by digitalaudiorock · · Score: 1

    Sorry if this hijacks the posters question a little...but it's the first thing that came to mind when I saw the topic. I'm not sure if others have found the same, but in cases where I've needed a KVM, including my current setup at home, I've spent what seems like man years of my life screwing with KVMs. A KVM that does NOT totally suck is an animal that does NOT exist.

    My current setup works with many quirks that constantly screw with me, and it took forever to get to this point. I went through two KVMs that were totally unusable for various reasons...stuck keys in Linux only(??)...you name it. When I finally got one that seemed to play nicely I discovered that it didn't work with my T43 Thinkpad docking station. I found other users that had encountered the same issue with this switch ONLY on the T43 docking station...unbelievable. Believe it or not, just for the hell of it, I tried putting one of the bad KVMs (that I'd kept too long to return) in between my working one and the T43 and it worked...only because the two switches used different hot keys. That's the kludgy setup I have to this day.

    However that setup is all PS2, so now that I'm overdue to replace my Linux workstation, I get to do it all over again, or figure out how to live without the KVM. Seriously...has anyone else found this things to suck this bad???

    1. Re:Be thankful if you DON'T need a KVM by Jaruzel · · Score: 3, Informative

      I know your pain. I've been through many problematic KVMs. :(

      However, I've recently bought one of these:

      http://www.aten.co.uk/products/productItem.php?model_no=CS682

      Works wonderfully, between my docked Dell Laptop (work machine) and my no-brand tower desktop (personal machine). Monitor is a Dell 24" ultrasharp, keyboard is a dell branded one, and mouse is a Logitech MX518.

      This KVM just 'works' - I really am impressed with it. Hotkey is scroll-lock twice plus enter, which is an extra keypress compared to other KVMs I've used, but never fails to switch. It even comes with a proper button on a cable should you wish to use that instead of the hot-key combo.

      Hope this helps.

      -Jar

      --
      Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
    2. Re:Be thankful if you DON'T need a KVM by karnal · · Score: 1

      This isn't a plug for KVMs, but between my two windows stations at work - I have a laptop with 2 23" screens and a desktop with a single 22" (used to be 2, "upgrade" from the desktop side eliminated one due to graphics card incompatibility). I use Input Director to shift the main keyboard/mouse focus to the desktop and back.

      I'd bet there's software out there for linux/windows hybrids etc to cover this. I gain the additional screen and resources of a second machine - while being able to display network stats etc constantly on the 2nd machine/3rd monitor without using any of my laptop's resources.

      I do have a keyboard stashed close by in case something happens, but it's not required at all times.

      --
      Karnal
    3. Re:Be thankful if you DON'T need a KVM by Jaruzel · · Score: 1

      I also used Input Director for a while, until I realised that it doesn't work if the remote/slave [Windows] machine is 'locked' or awaiting a Ctrl-Alt-Del login (which is required for Domain based machines) - real shame because I was really started to like it ...

      -Jar

      --
      Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
    4. Re: Be thankful if you DON'T need a KVM by karnal · · Score: 1

      Ctrl-alt-insert triggers a ctrl-alt-del on the slave machine, even pre-login.

      --
      Karnal
  21. Vertical Dell U2412MB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I work from home, and I use a vertical 24" monitor (connected to my laptop) where I can see around 135 lines of code at a glance. This is my monitor: Dell U2412MB, priced $370: http://accessories.us.dell.com/sna/productdetail.aspx?s=bsd&sku=320-2676 Whenever I want to see a movie, I can rotate the monitor back to horizontal position.

  22. First things first by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

    You want to take care of your main screen first (you'll thank me later). It should be about level with your eyes for good posture, and not too close. I'm using a logitech mk605 laptop stand, but any will do. Or you could swap your secondary and main screen. Get external keyboard and mouse anyway, they are always much better than laptops'.

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  23. Close the laptop by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

    First, get a USB keyboard and mouse that you can plug into the laptop (directly or via a hub), so you don't need to use the laptop's keyboard and trackpad. Then set up your display configuration to duplicate the desktop on both monitors. Now you can close or almost close the laptop and slide it under the monitor, or off to one side, out of the way while you work. Alternatively you can extend your desktop across both monitors, set the 27" monitor to be your main display and use the laptop's screen as a secondary monitor. This second option gives you the advantage of being able to set the 27" monitor to a higher resolution than the laptop's screen would support.

    1. Re:Close the laptop by Malenx · · Score: 1

      Exactly what I do, also it's nice to sit your laptop on a cooling pad like http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005C31HC0/ref=oh_details_o05_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc= if you do not use a dock.

  24. Bad ergonomics by pipatron · · Score: 2

    Placing the large monitor higher up will give you a real crappy working position, pretty much the opposite of the most natural, which is to look slightly down on the screen. Do what everyone else told you, use a dock for the laptop and have a real keyboard and mouse.

    --
    c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    1. Re:Bad ergonomics by bipbop · · Score: 1

      This is the point I came here to make. Looking to the side all the time is bad, but so is looking up all the time!

      The OP needs to solve a different problem.

  25. Ask Slashdot: Monitor Setup For Programmers by magicglean · · Score: 1

    HEY! since you're in an office... try a couple of A4 stacks.. that did the trick for me.//

  26. Inexpensive USB keyboard by microTodd · · Score: 1

    The solution I recommend, which is how my desk is setup, is incredibly simple. A USB keyboard and mouse. Less than $50. Now make the big monitor your main desktop. Piece of cake.

    I'm trying to understand this question. It seems really simple. Is there something I'm missing here?

    --
    "You cannot find out which view is the right one by science in the ordinary sense." - C.S. Lewis on Intelligent Design
    1. Re:Inexpensive USB keyboard by RR · · Score: 1

      No, what you want is an expensive USB keyboard. Like a nice Unicomp version of the Model M, or maybe a nice capacitive switch keyboard. There are so many (pricey!) options.

      Also, I hate cables moving around getting tangled, so I got a wireless mouse.

      --
      Have a nice time.
    2. Re:Inexpensive USB keyboard by admdrew · · Score: 1

      Agreed - I've been on a Das Keyboard for a few years now (the Professional "Silent" model), and can't say enough awesome things about it. Totally worth the price.

  27. Just sort it out. by seyyah · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just sort it out man.

  28. Re:if you really want to boost the height,... by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Funny

    (if they are lying on the ground you will probably need something new to put your feed on, but that's another story,..)

    Your food comes in sacks?

    --
    No sig today...
  29. Get the laptop out of the way by CockMonster · · Score: 1

    My laptop is fairly powerful in all aspects except for the utterly useless for programming 1366x768 screen. I got a 27" monitor that supports up to 2560x1440, 'borrowed' and old USB keyboard and mouse from work, put the laptop on a chair next to where the montior sits (I don't have room for a desk). That's it, make sure the air ducts of the laptop aren't blocked and the only time you'll need to touch it is to turn it on. Put the laptop screen onto the lowest power setting too!

  30. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by anagama · · Score: 1

    Four reams of paper stacked up. Set monitor on pile. Place laptop in front. And like everyone else mentioned, plug in a keyboard and mouse.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  31. The not so obvious answer by houghi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, all have answerd how you can do it, I have karma to burn so here is the not so obvious answer:
    You are an idiot and should not be programming. If you can not think outside the box (Get it? Box?) then you are obvious not able to do so when programming demands it.
    So the obvious answer would be to get a new job.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    1. Re:The not so obvious answer by Fox_1 · · Score: 1

      I'm with you, no karma in it, but I also can't reach the OP to slap sense into them.
      Are we really wasting time on this question?
      This is the: ' I need 3 highlighters in different colours in order to study crap ', delay, delay, delay, because the OP has no clue what to do. The perfect setup isn't going to suddenly make you 100x more productive. Besides it's actually easier to adjust your setup after you done some work. Once you know what you are doing you optimize, rather than some kinda weird guess at future needs without any idea how it'll actually work.
      The truth is: if the OP is spending this amount of effort and time in trying to resolve how to setup his frigging display at his new job, then the OP probably has no idea what they are doing.

      --
      The rock, the vulture, and the chain
    2. Re:The not so obvious answer by tarpitcod · · Score: 2

      I mean seriously. This is like:

      >Hey there new programmer
      Err, Hello?

      >Weren't you supposed to be here at 9:30 ?

      Umm, yes but I couldn't come up the elevator.

      > Why not?

      Well I didn't know which floor.

      > Isn't the floor written on that big board near the elevator?

      Oh ah, well I suppose it could have been

      > So how did you get here?

      I just walked up the stairs and stopped on each floor to see if I saw the company name

      > But we are on the 32nd floor?

      Yes, it did seem to take a while, especially the knocking

      > The knocking?

      Well, yes, some of the doors were locked, so I had to knock to ask someone if this was 'AX7121 Systems'

      > But, didn't it occur to you when they said NO, to ask them if they knew which floor AX7121 Systems was on?

      Ah, yes I did, that caused me to go back down to the 7th floor three times.

      >What?

      I went back down to the 7th floor three times

      >What?

      Well someone said you were on the 7th floor, in total I went to the 7th floor 4 times, the 9th floor 3 times, and the 13th floor twice

      >But if you had checked the 7th floor on the way up didn't it occur to you that we probably couldn't suddenly move in and appear there so you didn't need to recheck it?

      Uh, well now you mention it, but I wanted to use a SAFE algorithm

      > Hang on a minute I read your resume, you said you have a 4 year degree in computer science

      Yes, I do, I graduated from #blah blah# last summer

      > Did you guys ever cover elevator seeking problems?

      Oh yes, we did - lots of work on that, it's related to reflection in Java, I know all about that!

      > How is it related to reflection in Java?

      I could reflect from my Elevator instance to find out what kind of elevator it is, and then I could call the .goToFloor method with a flor

      > How would that have helped?

      Well, I could have ridden the elevator instead of using the stairs, which would have sped things up lots and made the algorithm more efficient

      > Are you joking?

      Why would you ask that? It would definitely speed up the algorithm a little bit don't you think?

      > I have a terrible pain in the side of my head, by the way, what is your name?

      Clouseau

    3. Re:The not so obvious answer by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      don't be so hard on him, if he'd read the book (get it book, preferably a big thick one like any introduction to .NET book) then he'd have his solution solved.

      Books are good, though he might need to read a 2nd one to reinforce his now-elevated vision of a solution.

  32. Newstar has plenty of monitor arms by otuz · · Score: 1

    I use one of these and I'm happy with it, but there are plenty of different models available for various different uses.

  33. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by Zumbs · · Score: 1

    That is a good way to get an aching neck. When working with a screen, the top of the screen should be slightly below your eyes.

    --
    The truth may be out there, but lies are inside your head
  34. Use whatever's handy by dl107227 · · Score: 1

    I have a similar setup with my large monitor above my laptop monitor. I have the big monitor sitting atop a stack of old catalogs. I hadn't even considered shopping around for a solution but I'm not very uptight about the tidiness of my desk (massive understatement).

  35. Dual Monitors and ditch the laptop screen by KevinH456 · · Score: 2

    At home, and at my last job, I had dual 24" monitors attached to a laptop. At my current job, I have two monitors on a desk mount with a desktop pc. I found that two large monitors in front of my face with a real keyboard and mouse is the best setup. I use the laptop screen as kind of an "auxiliary" monitor. I put things that distract me over there.

    --
    All sigs are created equal.
  36. Build it! by kimanaw · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Timely post. I've been struggling w/ the same situation, and just wandered around HomeDepot awhile until I found the parts. I looked for an actual storebought solution, but didn't find anything that can support 27" monitors.

    (Long version)

    I've been working from home for 15+ years, big laptop on a big lapdesk, in a recliner. Decadent, yes, but productive.

    About 6 months ago, I built myself a standup workstation to force me off my big arse, and added a 27" monitor above my 18.5" laptop. Loved it: more screen, felt more awake, back felt much better (highly recommend the standup to anyone having weight/back/etc issues from sitting all day)

    Then I started jogging on the treadmill 30-45min a day. For all its great benefits, working at the standup tired my legs before my jog, so I went back to the recliner, but missed the 2nd screen. So I took another spin around HomeDepot and grabbed some parts and built what I needed...though it took several iterations.

    Hints: don't use cheap aluminum braces, the weight of the monitor torques it too much. I'm picking up a beefy steel brace today. Unless your stand will be attached to some other furniture, and be fairly short, use metal (1.5" conduit or similar), rather than wood for the poles. I used a wooden closet rod, and it definitely bends a bit. I've been able to compensate, but will probably upgrade to metal in future.

    And as a base for the whole. thing, look for a hefty patio umbrella stand. I happened to have an old one lying around that does the trick, but it may need more weight.

    This probably sounds like a lot more effort than you had in mind, but sometimes the best solution is homebrewed.

    --
    007: "Who are you?"
    Pussy: "My name is Pussy Galore."
    007: "I must be dreaming..."
    1. Re:Build it! by mnooning · · Score: 1

      That was my solution, too. Multiple monitors are a real productivity booster. I have one 21", one 24" and one 27" monitor - from years past - connected to two cheap video cards. If you do not play games you do not not tax your video cards very much. Both of the larger monitors are turned sideways so I can see longer code listings at a glance, and especially see how the if-else clauses line up.

      Do *not* put the top of the monitors at eye height. That was great advice in the days of 16 inch monitors.

      I made the height of each monitor such that looking straight into a monitor would have my eyes 1/3 the distance from the top. The eyes normally can look up slightly without neck strain. The head can tilt down well without strain.

      If you don't want to build a special platform, just buy the right thickness of paper reams and/or wood, as suggested elsewhere.

  37. Use a keyboard with a built in usb hub by Angturil · · Score: 1

    I use a g15, and plug in my mouse into one of the ports, so only one cable to plug into laptop. I also make the external monitor the "main", and only use the laptop monitor for command prompts, output windows, tests, etc. When you're on the road, your laptop monitor becomes the main

  38. Get a dock by BulletMagnet · · Score: 1

    Hopefully the laptop they provided you isn't some undockable consumer version unit but a business class unit that can be - Dell's laptop docks for their business class laptops can support two monitors, and I would assume HP's can to. Get a real keyboard, mouse, dock, use the 27 as the primary, and if you feel like it, get another monitor as a secondary.

  39. Slightly OT: The importance of a good setup by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    After quite some hefty turmoil in the last few months I downgraded my long-term lifestyle expectancies a bit and took on a job as a web-developer (LAMP, HTML5/CSS3/Ajax - the whole lot). The job pays 10000 Euros less than my last one but is in a neat small company building and maintaining PHP applications for a boring but solid vertical market. ... Anyway: The the companies boss has a policy of providing a top-grade work environment. I got a brand new 27" iMac - we (5 employees, 2 part-time freelancers) all are using either 27" iMacs or MacBooks with 27" Tunderbolt displays, we all have topg-grade Duo-Back Chairs and, this is a very good thing I've come to notice in the 2 weeks I'm there - we all have a desk that can change its height electrically. With the simple push of a button we can raise our desks to standing height, which is a huge plus when your stitting in front of the computer 8,5 hrs a day. Have a little presentation or demo-discussion for one or two co-workers? Raise your desk to standing height and all gather around for little stand-in. ... I actually find it fun to work at the office.

    Bottom line: Better work environments pay off almost instantly. If you want to do some good, you'll try and get this across to your boss.

    My 2 cents.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  40. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The ergonomic people say that the CENTER of the monitor should be directly at eye level

  41. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by war4peace · · Score: 1

    None of my monitors have their top slightly below my eyes. I eyeball monitors all day long (10-16 hours a day). My neck is fine, thanks for asking.
    Not all people are alike, no matter how much specialists struggle to classify them and put them in little boxes.

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  42. Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...Also, if I use an external kbd, the screen of the laptop (which is a beautiful 13" FHD screen) ends up further away, and why not use good screen real estate when it's available?

    In the original question you say "The problem is that my main screen is the tiny laptop right in front of me... I want to put the 27" monitor directly above my laptop..."

    Decide which one it is: A "tiny" laptop screen, which you don't want right in front of you, or a "beautiful 13 FHD" screen that you do want right in front of you.

    I have no problem switching from external keyboard to laptop keyboard, but perhaps I'm not as good a typist, and hence my limiting factor isn't the keyboard.

    "The stand does not have a high enough setting to accommodate this. What would be a good stand that can mount to a desk high enough to be above a laptop?"

    Oh, that one's easy. Use a pile of old textbooks. I recommend geology, because they tend to be a large format.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by Atzanteol · · Score: 2

      I've seen folks use a ream or two of copy paper. Works like a charm.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    2. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by Deekin_Scalesinger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This, and /endthread. I have enjoyed /. lo these many moons, but these types of "questions" border on something you'd see on the late (and little missed) Call for Help on TechTV. Please, please start raising the bar again, huh?

      --
      "As the intrepid kobold companion continues his journey, he begins to wonder... if priests raises dead, why anybody die?
    3. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by 6Yankee · · Score: 2

      Please, please start raising the bar again, huh?

      I've got a couple of reams of paper that you can put under it if you like...

    4. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by Deekin_Scalesinger · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the RL chuckle :)

      --
      "As the intrepid kobold companion continues his journey, he begins to wonder... if priests raises dead, why anybody die?
    5. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      I understand geology textbooks can also work

    6. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by adolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, that one's easy. Use a pile of old textbooks. I recommend geology, because they tend to be a large format.

      I use ammo boxes, since neither the ballot box nor the jury box did a very good job at holding up the monitor.

      (Yes, really. They stack nicely enough, and keep the seldom-used screen that I use for diagnosing other computers and/or my normally-headless Linux box just above the height of the other two monitors on the desk. Cheap, too; these were free.)

    7. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by sfsetse · · Score: 1

      I've seen folks use a ream or two of copy paper. Works like a charm.

      I've used this method for *years*. Much cheaper than buying a new stand, and it allows me to adjust the height outside the range of a normal stand.

    8. Re:Decide [Re:Shove the laptop to one side] by almitydave · · Score: 1

      Please, please start raising the bar again, huh?

      I've got a couple of reams of paper that you can put under it if you like...

      If that doesn't work, you can have my copy of James Cameron's autobiography. You only need one, since it self-inflates to fill the available space.

      --
      my, your, his/her/its, our, your, their
      I'm, you're, he's/she's/it's, we're, you're, they're
  43. lap or desk by Torvac · · Score: 1

    laptop vs. desktop , its in the word

  44. Dual Monitors and Decent Keyboard by Phaid · · Score: 1

    I hate typing on laptops. Unless I am working at a customer site, I plug my laptop into the network and use it as a file server, and do my actual work on a workstation. I use two 24" ViewSonic monitors running at 1920x1080, and a Filco Majestouch 2 keyboard. I have almost the exact same setup in my home office as I do at work; the difference is that at home I use a keyboard with Cherry MX Blue switches that are super loud, while work I use the version with Cherry MX Brown switches that don't have the loud "click" so it won't bother my office mate. $150 may seem excessive for a keyboard, but I've had them for several years and they're the best productivity investment I ever made.

  45. telephone books by swschrad · · Score: 3, Funny

    if you want the big screen above the laptop, put it on a stack of telephone books. if that confuses you, ask an old person ;)

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
    1. Re:telephone books by wezelboy · · Score: 1

      This works just fine. If you can't find phone books, just go to mouser.com and request a catalog.

      Or you can use your copy of Programming $framework_name for $obsolete_version_of_windows

    2. Re:telephone books by Polo · · Score: 1

      in an office, just snag some reams of copier paper.

  46. use rdp or use the monitor alone by ebrandsberg · · Score: 1

    if you have a laptop and another computer, then use rdp to use the monitor for both. if just the laptop, ignore the fact the laptop has a monitor, and use the large monitor alone.

  47. Re:if you really want to boost the height,... by turkeyfeathers · · Score: 1

    Your food comes in sacks?

    He's American.

  48. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    It's not waste. It's an emergency reserve.

    Every company runs out of paper sometimes.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  49. Re:Using a laptop for programming?? by PrimalChrome · · Score: 2

    Silly, silly child. I have an i7, 16GB RAM, 2GB GeForce, 17" display, and a 7200 rpm HD with plenty of space. If I so desired, my boot/app drive could be SSD and spinning storage in my second bay. At the office I have a USB dock for keyboard and mouse. At home, I have keyboard/mouse/22" monitor for immediate hook-up. My machine is by *far* more capable than 99% of desktops out there....and it's mobile.

    The whole 'get a real [desktop] computer' line is horribly outdated in modern computing.

  50. 27" - 13" - no contest! by garry_g · · Score: 1

    Really, if you have a 27" main monitor, the 13" of the notebook (albeit full HD) is nothing more than additional tool space ...
    Also, as for the keyboard - while it may be nice to be able to use the Notebook keyboard (I do that right now), I would hate using it 8-9 hours per day for coding ... how much "getting used to" do you really need to be able to use it in an emergency situation? From a ergonomical POV, I've not yet seen a single notebook keyboard that can keep up with even lower priced regular keyboards ... I would not want to swap my MS Natural Keyboard (at least something M$ got right) for ANY notebook KBD ...

  51. Related Problem by raftpeople · · Score: 1

    The outlet is about 8 feet away but my power cord is only 7 feet, what should I do?

    1. Re:Related Problem by raftpeople · · Score: 1

      That just might work

  52. Put your big monitor on a phone book by AmazingRuss · · Score: 1

    ... or other large chunk of dead tree, then put your laptop in front of it.

  53. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by pla · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not all people are alike, no matter how much specialists struggle to classify them and put them in little boxes.

    The fact that your bad posture hasn't hurt you - yet - Doesn't mean the same basic laws of physics don't apply to you as apply to the rest of us. :)

    Your skull should normally "balance" atop your spine. Any deviation from that requires the active use of muscles to offset the imbalance; and if you maintain such a position for long periods of time, eventually those muscles get tired. At that point, you start risking damage as secondary muscles try to do the same job much less efficiently.

    Perhaps you have exceptionally strong/enduring neck muscles. Perhaps you've just gotten lucky so far. Perhaps you just haven't hit 30 yet and still consider your body indestructible. Doesn't matter - It doesn't hurt you to have an ergonomically-friendly work area, so why the hell would you deliberately make it otherwise?

  54. A cardbord box? by rizole · · Score: 1

    Worked for me. Sheesh how hard can it be? No cardboard boxes? I've used bricks before but if you're not a cheep skate like me then go to a shop that sells office furniture?

  55. I wish companies would quit laptops for dev by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    I mean I'm a software engineer and my company gave me a laptop. But what was the point of that instead of a desktop? The vast majority of the time I'm at my desk developing and a desktop of the same price would have been faster, had a bigger hard drive, and more memory.(So most of the time when it matters I have a slower machine because of the laptop.) I guess there's 2 situations where the laptop would be better, in meetings and when anybody goes to a customer. So let's see, I'm not one of the developers that visits customers so it's no difference to me and for most of my meetings I just bring a notebook and a pen since that's so much lighter than my laptop.(I mean it's not like I try to develop in a meeting since I swear, if I ever try somebody notices and decides they have to get me involved and stop my work.) Actually in the meeting scenario they could just have a bunch of computers already set up and have people just remote desktop over to their computer. Honestly it's as though they decided that something that's of benefit less than 1% of the time was a good way to go rather giving me what I'd rather have, a faster computer at a given price. (No, they don't go top of the line laptops either which would have been ok.)

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
    1. Re:I wish companies would quit laptops for dev by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1

      You're supposed to take your laptop home and work evenings and weekends, for free.

      Didn't you get the memo?

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    2. Re:I wish companies would quit laptops for dev by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm in my 40's. I've wisened up enough to not do that shit:) (You'd be surprise how much better of a coder you can be when you're not exhausted. Wish more companies would figure that out.)

      --
      Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  56. Sissy by Chemisor · · Score: 4, Funny

    Seriously, be a man. Drill a hole in the floor with a jackhammer. Stick in a 2x4. Pour concrete. Nail monitor to the 2x4. Grab a beer. Done.

  57. Digitizer Neck - and the cure by MasterOfGoingFaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That is a good way to get an aching neck. When working with a screen, the top of the screen should be slightly below your eyes.

    This is a myth. People get long-term injury due to this practice.

    In the early days of CAD, we had constant complaints of "digitizer neck". CAD systems used a command line on the screen, and a digitizer tablet sitting on the desk for drawing. The digitizer tablet often had a plastic overlay with grids of icons. Clicking the icon on the tablet launched a command. The user were constantly looking up and down, causing pretty bad neck pain.

    The solution was to raise the monitor so the mid-to-top-third was at eye level. Pain vanished same day.

    Why did this work? The pain was not caused by moving the head up and down, it was a result of certain neck muscles never having a chance to rest. If the monitor was set too low, the back neck muscles were always in tension, and never got a chance to recover. If you set the monitor at a level that allows your head to balance, your neck muscles relax, and can recover.

    A proper workstation setup: Raise/lower the chair so your knees are at-or-below the hips. Adjust the worksurface (keyboard/digitizer) level with your elbows, to allow your forearms to sit level. Adjust the middle of the monitor (or top 1/3) level with the eyes. Give it a day and tweak as needed. This won't work for everyone, but it is a great place to start. This method has worked for my clients for 30 years. Many have expressed that years of pain have vanish in a one or two days. Your mileage may vary.

    Disclaimer: I should point out that this post conflicts with most of what I read, including OSHA documents. Since I have no expertise in this area, you should ignore my advice. Do what OSHA suggests, as government knows best. But if nothing else works for you, consider trying the above as an experiment.

    --
    Place nail here >+
    1. Re:Digitizer Neck - and the cure by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I should point out that this post conflicts with most of what I read, including OSHA documents. Since I have no expertise in this area, you should ignore my advice. Do what OSHA suggests, as government knows best.

      Phew, thanks for the disclaimer. I was almost suckered to believe some professional CAD systems integrator with 30 years of practical experience setting up systems for the clients with excellent results.

    2. Re:Digitizer Neck - and the cure by MasterOfGoingFaster · · Score: 1

      Naw - just a guy, who's been at the wrong end of a legal gun.

      --
      Place nail here >+
  58. When plugged in... by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

    My laptop becomes my secondary screen and I use the 23" monitor as my main screen with email, help files, and references on the smaller 15" laptop screen. When in this configuration I'm using an external ergo keyboard and mouse, which really did make a difference when it came to my wrists.

    I found this set up works wonders for me.

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  59. Cinder Block by Fieryphoenix · · Score: 1

    Works great, stable, and as a plus you can take it home on the weekends!

  60. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    Surely you mean the bottom of the screen should be slightly below your eye level.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  61. Synergy by colsandurz45 · · Score: 1

    Use your laptop and desktop together with synergy... if your latency is low it's the best way to go.

  62. Re:Using a laptop for programming?? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    slow hard disk might be good for programming - it'll help you notice performance issues where you're hitting the disk too much.

    You shouldn't test your programs primarily on hardware that's better than the hardware on which it will be deployed.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  63. Wrong question... by bradley13 · · Score: 1

    Seems like the wrong question - really, you're making this overly complicated. The right question is: how do you work with a laptop attached to a big monitor.

    - Low budget: Set the darned monitor on a couple of books, to raise it above the laptop screen. I know people who like to work this way: laptop monitor with menus and info, big screen for coding.

    - Almost as cheap: Shove the laptop off to the side, turn off the screen (or close it), and attach a real keyboard and mouse.

    - More expensive, but the "right" solution: buy a docking station.

    Note that none of these involve buying an overpriced monitor stand.

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
  64. Here is a better question: by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    I am rephrasing the OP's question to the better and the eternal: What is the ideal monitor / hardware setup for programming?

    First you want more than one monitor. But you don't want those monitors to be too big. Personally I don't like going over 24" as my head feels like it is going to swivel off looking at two 27" monitors. Plus if you develop for 27" it will look crappy on most people's little screens. Next you want as much memory as possible. Often when programming many elements of your development environment will not only each demand much memory but with leaks and whatnot you will demand more and more memory as the day wears on and thus extra memory will keep you from either rebooting or strategically turning things off. For me one of the biggest memory pigs are the VMs and they can be complete pigs. So 24Gigs is a good start for a development machine. Your primary work and IDE/compiler should be on an SSD. This will speed things like compilation time way up. Also the number of cores you have becomes quite important as this is great for most compilers and a must for any VMs. It is nice if you can dedicate 2 or more cores to a VM while still having 2 or more cores for your primary machine.

    Needless to say all of the above implies a desktop. But a laptop can be a great adjunct to the primary development desktop as developing in new and interesting varied locations invigorates your code. A good coding setup should allow your code to move freely between the laptop and the desktop. Ideally you can check out your code onto the laptop and be gone in minutes. Beyond that everything on a laptop is compromising your work so the minimums would be 15" and as much memory as you can afford.

    But the best setup that I have seen for server development was where each developer had a little blade machine running in a drawer instead of as a VM on their primary machine. Nothing beats being able to push a button to reboot or plug in a USB for a quick and dirty OS reinstall.

    I would love to hear from people who have tried 3 monitors and those who have tried the vertical monitors.

  65. LCD Arms by pturley · · Score: 2

    I've made a number of happy purchases at http://www.lcdarms.com./ They are expensive, but really good.

  66. Your First Problem Solving Task by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    and you fail.

    Programming is all about solving problems and you can't sort out your own monitor. Might be a good time to find a new profession. I program on my laptop screen and have the browser open in the full hd monitor. I also have a standard mouse attached because touch pads are irritating to me.

    1. Re:Your First Problem Solving Task by oxidus60659 · · Score: 1

      and you fail.

      Programming is all about solving problems and you can't sort out your own monitor. Might be a good time to find a new profession. I program on my laptop screen and have the browser open in the full hd monitor. I also have a standard mouse attached because touch pads are irritating to me.

      Getting a second opinion from someone more experienced is not good problem solving? Well, I'll be sure to keep that in mind next time I feel like wasting company time and money!

    2. Re:Your First Problem Solving Task by admdrew · · Score: 1

      I'd agree with KalvinB (and others here), at least based on how you formed your original question. Programmers help those who help themselves, and you didn't demonstrate that you've actually done anything to help answer your own (extremely basic and non-programming-specific) question.

  67. Re: 42" + 22" by pharazon · · Score: 1

    I use a 42" FullHD LCD TV as my primary monitor, and a 22" TFT as the secondary. I would like to switch the 22" to another 42" to get some more screen space (it has only 1680x1050). The only bad thing about using a TV as a monitor is that you need to turn it on by using the remote. If you use HDMI input, I can't see any difference in quality (at least on my sets). Also, it's great for watching movies!

    --
    Tee.do Lean Task Management
  68. Master Alt-Tab by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1

    Use one real monitor, a real keyboard and a real mouse and switch between applications using Alt-Tab or something equivalent. Colleagues of mine switch constantly between the two and take significantly more time to switch context. Constantly dragging windows from one monitor to the other is really silly and IMHO illustrates how you aren't in control of your environment.

    YMMV but, in any case, consider the cost of context switches and minimize that.

    Also, in my experience, changing position frequently allows me to view things from different perspective. And for me that not only has positive physical consequences. My mind remains healthier -or so I believe- and pressure points on my body vary.

    --

    I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
  69. No external monitor for you by devforhire · · Score: 1

    If you can not figure out how to arrange two monitors by yourself, you probably should stick with just one and it should not be used to edit code.

  70. Re:Using a laptop for programming?? by Carrot007 · · Score: 2

    Works all around unfortunatly!

    The programmers machine shoudl be the worst in the company,

    That way you know it's going to work if it works on theirs.

    However we would like this kept a secret. Don't tell!

    --
    +----------------- | What is the question!
  71. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by war4peace · · Score: 1

    No, I actually have moving eyeballs. I don't need to raise my neck, I just point my eyes a bit upwards. Also, I spend most time looking at and around the center of the screen, and to the sides.
    FYI, I'm 33 and been working full-time with computers since I was 14. I'm emaciated, 6 feet tall and weigh 140-something pounds. And yes, i think good posture is great to have, but I also think the limitation imposed by some "specialists" are ridiculously tight.

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  72. Sure you're in the right job? by GrahamCox · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Programmers need to be resourceful and good at solving problems. If you can't see that this simply requires a stack of books in the first instance (TODO: optimise this later), then you've failed at an extremely low hurdle my friend. Perhaps you'd be more suited to burger flipping?

  73. First-world problems by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    Hey, here's a thought: instead of dicking around asking other people how to solve a pretty basic problem, why don't you get back to work and figure it out?

  74. First World Problems by devloop · · Score: 1

    The horror!, did they not provide you with a cup warmer for your fair-trade organic double latte macchiato?

  75. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by war4peace · · Score: 1

    I eat plenty. It's just a matter of how each human being is constructed. My grandpa was skinny, my father was skinny, so am I. I'm one of the lucky few who can eat as much as they like but don't get fat. U jelly? :)

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  76. Here's an easy answer. by johnnys · · Score: 1

    1. Take a pile of the old tech manuals you have lying around (Venereal Basic for Dummies, Internet Exploder Resource Kit, Windows NT Networking Nightmare Guide, etc.) 2. Put this pile behind your laptop. 3. Put existing monitor stand on top of the pile. 4. Adjust height by removing/adding useless manuals as needed. 5. ??? 6. Profit!!!!

    --
    Sometimes the "writing on the wall" is blood spatter...
  77. Re:Ergotron DS-100 Vertical MOD PARENT UP by jddj · · Score: 1

    Love, Love, LOVE my Ergotron arm (single monitor arm, 24" Dell, way adjustable). Check it out!

  78. not necessarily problems by Chirs · · Score: 1

    I use a laptop for programming...but mostly because I work from home and it's efficient in terms of power consumption.

    That said, it has 8GB of ram (so my codebase is cached), a decent cpu, and I use exernal keyboard/mouse/monitors. Also, for serious compiles I use the corporate compile farm.

  79. Ditch the laptop and get a desktop by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but perhaps I'm just old-fashioned... But ditch the laptop for full time use and get a desktop with 2 or 3 real desktop computer monitors and move on with life. The cost of doing that is minor compared to what you are, or should be getting paid. I've done similar work and I use a trio of 30" IPS displays and would never, ever, ever go back to less. The amount of work that can be gotten done on such real estate cannot be under estimated.

  80. rtfm by whozatmac · · Score: 1
    man (1) circular saw; man (1) screwdriver; man (1)socket set; man (3) 2x4; man (5) bolt and nut; man (5) carpenters screw;

    I'm pretty sure using these tools and devices you can solve your problem. otherwise, try #ubuntu

    or #microsoft

  81. Flexibility by AndyCanfield · · Score: 1

    I have a notebook computer, and I use a monitor, a USB keyboard, and a wireless mouse. I can put these three things anywhere I want them.

  82. Keyboard is the key by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    If you type a lot, you will eventually set your teres major, teres minor, serratus major and/or your lattisimus into spasm.

    You might spend $300 on a special keyboard- but

    a) it's really expensive.
    b) it still forces you to hold your arms pretty close to your sides.

    Try this

    Laptop on the left, main monitor in the middle, possible third monitor on the right.

    A cheap small keyboard on the left. ($10 at best buy or frys).
    A regular size keyboard on the right (so your cursor keys are where you expect).

    Mouse wherever you like it.

    Try starting with the keyboards at least 8" apart. It takes under 2 minutes to get used to this set up. The right hand only uses the right side of the right keyboard. The left hand only uses the left side of the left keyboard.

    Turn the keyboards til the match the natural angle of your hands.
    You may also tilt the keyboards slightly by kicking up or down the legs and placing various thicknesses of yellow sticky pads under them. You can also tilt them so the inside or outside edge is higher ( so you don't have to turn your hand inwards to flatten it which puts torque on your forearm).

    You will find your hands close to two feet apart (thumb to thumb)-- your muscles will not spasm. You will have less wrist carpal tunnel and less forearm tendinitis.

    Hope this helps!

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  83. Programmer Ergonomics by MrKaos · · Score: 1
    Any employer who won't buy a $300 dollar dual monitor setup for a coder is engaging in false economy. $300 monitor vs $80K-$100K programmer, you do the productivity calculations. It's just so ridiculous I can't believe it's still a conversation we are having in the 21st century.

    I sought specific advice regarding ergonomics for my productivity and achieved a setup I take with me to an employer. I don't really care about excuses from cheap employers, as far as the care of my spine and eyes go the main interface to my work machine has a direct effect on my well being and productivity. The physical pain from not having an appropriate set-up is simply not worth it. Quality employers understand they maximise returns by having comfortable employees.

    My existing set-up(s) allow a maximum 16 hour work day to be sustained, if required for short term objectives, without ongoing injury. The goal from the set-up is to maximise productive time by eliminating distractions caused by poor ergonomics. 6 hours a day at maximum productivity and 1-3 at roughly 50% productivity. Outside of that time is the zone of mistakes and failure through diminishing returns - extreme caution. The set-up is achieved this way;

    • Get a decent height adjustable dual monitor stand, dispose of the stock monitor stand as they rarely are high enough. The amount of desk space you will retrieve will allow you to put your phone, laptop and belongings under the monitor with enough room for manuals etc. The reduction of clutter will also reduce distractions.
    • Adjust the position so that the centre point of the two monitors aligns with your nose and your chair allows you a minor bias for one or the other monitor - roughly 15cms of movement side to side.
    • Your feet are flat on the floor or you have a foot rest if you need it, your knees are obtuse to a right angle for your personal comfort.
    • The chair should have arms that support your elbows when you lean back in the chair. As a bonus it looks like you are thinking and you IQ will appear to be more.
    • The monitor desk height should be so your eyes are roughly in line with the 2/3rd point of the monitor real estate. 2/3rds below, 1/3rd above your eye line either in landscape or portrait monitor position. It's a matter of preference when you use both landscape and portrait.
    • Get a colleague to photograph you sitting at your monitor set-up from behind you.
    • Observe your posture in the photograph - ensure your back is upright, neck is straight and head is up. If not adjust the height again until it is
    • Your arms should also be obtuse to the right angle for comfort.

    When you are at home, roll up a half folded towel and lay on your back. Put the towel under your neck so that your head is just touching the unrolled part of the towel to give your neck a good stretch. The thickness of the roll is preference after a while of practice - don't go to far at first.

    hth - ymmv

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  84. No - Switch main screen by terminal.dk · · Score: 1

    Use the big screen as the main screen. If you are a developer, you know how to do that (I have seen many pretenders, claiming tobe, and working as developers, who does not posess basic user skills of their preferred platform, I would even hire them to type in Word).

    Then get a stand for the laptop, and use it as a secondary screen to documentation etc.

  85. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    That is simply not true. The top of the viewable screen area should be at your eye level. The human neck is in most comfortable position when you look in a slight down-angle.

  86. Sit on the laptop and type with your toes! by zimtmaxl · · Score: 1

    For better ergonomics sit on the laptop and type with your toes. That way you have your hands free for motion control!

    --
    how IT is changing the world - http://max.zamorsky.name
  87. Re:usb keyboard and mouse by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    Your hands should also well-supported. Hanging hands can cause terrible neck pain too.

  88. Simple fix, no snark. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Buy an IBM p/n 22P5265 in eBay. Cheap and done. One of the best 3 stands ever made.

    I can do snark if you want, however.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  89. Re:You are doing it wrong by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    I don't either see why he would need the laptop screen anymore. When at workplace, close the lid and connect the peripherals. Solves the display problem quite easily.

  90. Great place for ideas! by jon3k · · Score: 1

    http://www.reddit.com/r/battlestations

    Great place to get some ideas and inspiration for your home setup.

  91. Don't be a mean bastard by Dareth · · Score: 1

    Don't be a mean bastard.

    Burger flipping would put this guy in near proximity to a hot grill. Not sure what forum he would post his question, "I often have to flip burgers at work. I keep burning my hand as they are very hot. Any suggestions on how other professional burger flippers have solved this problem?"

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
  92. Re: 42" + 22" by admdrew · · Score: 1

    Agreed, I have a 32" 1080p TV as my "main" monitor, and it works great. Next step, however, will be something like this - still big, but with a much better resolution.

  93. Use the monitor arm as a laptop stand. by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 1

    Do you still have the original stand for the monitor?

    Put the monitor back on its stand. There are laptop 'stands' that have a VESA bolt pattern on the back so you can mount them on a monitor arm. They're like $30 or something on Amazon. Get one of those, put the laptop onto it and put it next to the display at eye level. You can even float it off the side of your desk if you don't have one of those monster desks.

    --
    Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
  94. Pivot, dude. by nuxu · · Score: 1

    I got a pivot display a while back, and I could not be happier. It is so easy to read code without 10" of whitespace on the right. If your monitor isn't capable of this, then you might want to flip your laptop and suffer great amounts of workplace bullying.