You don’t usually have them all open at the same time, you minimize some. Or maybe you add more monitors.
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I can tell you’re really proud of these replies, but I’m afraid they don’t actually make sense.
You were hoping to prove a logical implication (if P then Q), but you feel it was disproved since the premise didn’t happen. However, “not P” doesn’t actually prove anything about the implication.
Anyway, no one is really accomplishing anything constructive here. Good luck!
If it’s not compelling enough for you to read it to support your position, why would I read it?
So you didn’t read it either? Interesting.
It’s not my job to make your point. You don’t get free labor.
Why? I’m not the one using it to justify an argument.
Does this assume instant, frictionless transportation of goods?
Antinatalism is a strawman slur against anyone that questions the viability of infinite growth.
Functionally, it’s the default because links do open in it, but why isn’t it able to tell that it’s already set?
No, I wouldn’t. It’s how I can tell if the setting actually took!
Maybe you checked “stop asking”?
Well that’s frustrating. I may need to check that again.
They always seem to have some critical limitation. Handbrake is too slow via flatpak to work. Flatpak Zoom had no camera access. Flatpak-only Zen browser can’t use passkeys. Zen browser asks to be my default browser every time I open it, even though it is and I always say yes; is this a flatpak limitation? I don’t know, and I’d prefer not to have to figure it out just for some theoretical benefits and more overhead.
It depends, up to four works for some apps depending on monitor size, but otherwise I do the same thing as @Nibodhika@lemmy.world.
Overlapping window managers, the most common type in use by far, just seem crazy to me. Windows almost never use the available monitor space, and they have to constantly be wrangled around each other so that… you can drag something instead of using the clipboard, I guess?