In Windows 11 there’s a button on the taskbar next to the start button that lets you switch between multiple desktop environments. It seems like something that would probably be useful in theory, but I can’t think of any reason why I would want to use it. Is it actually useful? What do people use it for?

  • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    26
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    Desktop 1: WFH environment - mail, terminal, ticket queue etc.

    Desktop 2: Me-stuff - lemmy, gmail, youtube, netflix, steam.

    • @BurningnnTree@lemmy.oneOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      47 months ago

      Why not just have all of that open on one desktop? Is it because you want your personal stuff to be hidden in case you need to share your screen?

      • @KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        167 months ago

        To group your open windows into 2 “themes”.
        So for example when you use Alt-Tab, you only flip through your work windows while working, and only through your me-stuff while on break.

      • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        17 months ago

        It’s a nice seapration of concerns. All the taskbar icons only show in their respective space, so I can keep my mind off work when I’m not working, and vice-versa, and there’s less general clutter to sort through.

  • @fuster93@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    187 months ago

    I’ve had cases where a game crashed and I couldn’t open any other window including the task manager. I could alt tab to it, but when I try opening it it would instantly revert back to the crashed game. But if you move task manager to another desktop and switch to that desktop, you can force close the crashed game. Pretty much a fringe case and I’ve never found another reason to use this feature personally.

  • @slowwooderrunsdeep@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    157 months ago

    I work as an engineer and I use it like a desktop for each project. Works very well when you need to work on more than one project at a time - all the programs, files, folders, browser tabs for one project are on one screen exactly where I left them, and exactly in the layout where I left off.

    I also keep the first desktop as a HOME screen, where I have email, Teams, Zoom, and my timesheet program. If I need to talk to someone about a project while I work on it, I just pop that chat out into a new window and move it to the respective desktop.

    The only limitation is that if you open something (like an Excel file) through Windows Explorer on desktop 1, but you have an instance of the program already running on desktop 3, it will jump around the desktops and open on the one where it’s already open. I have no idea why, not all programs do that, but it’s easy to move it to the correct place.

    Also it’s even more hand if you learn the keyboard shortcuts.

    • @HessiaNerd@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      67 months ago

      I did something similar, but was annoyed by all the jumping around when opening excel or word or PDFs… Plus even just having a group of emails and an explorer window open on a couple desktops really starts to eat ram it seems. Forget about solid works in that situation.

      If they allowed you to save desktops and fixed the jumping issues it might be useful.

      Depot was so much better.

    • @XeroxCool@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      27 months ago

      Sounds like excel is still doing what it has done for a while. Even though windows can finally (again) treat excel instances separately in the task bar, clicking one brings up the single excel window containing all excel files open. So if I open a 2nd excel file, then x it out, the 1st file is on top now. This doesn’t bug me when it’s the browser or Adobe because those at least clearly present as tabbed items and, more importantly, can be broken out to different windows

  • atocci
    link
    fedilink
    147 months ago

    This is something I actually use all the time. It helps to mentally separate the tasks I’m working on and keep things from getting cluttered. For example, if I’m editing audio on one desktop and preparing a 3D print on another, I can keep all those programs and files siloed into their own little workspace. I can also just stop working on either task at any point and just switch to a new clean desktop without losing my open programs and windows so I can just pop back into them later.

  • @DharkStare@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    137 months ago

    Another use I haven’t seen mentioned is that it’s good when you only have a single monitor. You can easily use shortcut keys to flip between the desktops. I could have my remote connection to another computer in one desktop and my local stuff in another and easily switch between the two.

  • @BURN@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    107 months ago

    I use this regularly on a laptop, but almost never on a desktop.

    It’s really nice if you have multiple full screen apps you’re switching back and forth from them pretty regularly, ie IDE in one env, browser in another, both can be full screen and switched without minimizing the other.

    Multi Monitor setups often solve the same problem.

      • @PowerSeries@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        English
        17 months ago

        Hmm spatial awareness? Left is code right is docs and if you have any other windows they don’t break that?

  • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
    link
    fedilink
    107 months ago

    When I was a university student I used this feature a lot (on Linux and macOS, I didn’t use Windows which didn’t have this feature yet then).

    I usually had different things to do at any one time (homework for different courses) and put the stuff I needed to do for each of them on one desktop each, plus one for things unrelated to university work (forums, wikis, reddit, general browsing). That way I wasn’t distracted by other stuff when working on one thing.

    I hardly used the feature before and after that.

  • Kalash
    link
    fedilink
    87 months ago

    Oh wow, windows is finally getting that feature? Nice. As a mac user this one of these “how the hell do you not have this” features that really baffled me.

    I use them when I have to work on multiple projects at once (programming). Basically, I have a desktop per project with all the documents and programms open that I need for that project. It’s very convenient.

    • @metallic_z3r0
      link
      37 months ago

      Windows 10 has had that for a few years now too, it was just less visible and a little clunkier.

    • @Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi
      link
      fedilink
      English
      37 months ago

      I personally really like the way macOS handles multiple desktops and full-screen apps. Would love to recreate it in KDE.

  • Rentlar
    link
    fedilink
    77 months ago

    Just putting out there use the Ctrl-Win-Left/Right shortcuts rather than the mouse, and you’ll find much more convenience out of it. (Ctrl Alt left/right for many Linux desktops)

    I use it all the time on Linux since forever, and with W11 at work…

    It’s to separate different uses, say have a gaming space, productivity space, background messaging/email/communication. You can shove anything that you’d want running but not in front of you away, while still being able to quickly access it.

    At work I do multiple projects, so I can have Project A related folders and programs open on one workspace, with Project B stuff on another, letting me switch between. If someone calls me about project B while I was working on A, I can quickly switch over, rather than closing my current stuff, or just leaving it all open and fumbling with alt tab.

  • @BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    77 months ago

    I’m a freelance consultant/trainer but I only have one computer, I use them to split my personal and client specific functions.

    I actually use three desktops:

    one for my “Normal” usage, so my personal e-mail, news, youtube, lemmy, netflix, etc. one for my gaming, I usually have up the game, notes, spreadsheets, streams, etc. one for my work, with client related websites, notes, code, file explorers, etc.

    When I’m teaching I actually have a second user login for my computer that I switch over to. This is to prevent me accidentally sharing anything on my screen that I didn’t intentionally prepare ahead of time. Especially things like accidentally showing my other client’s files/notes, downloads/recent files, browser history/autocomplete, etc.

  • @Nibodhika@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    57 months ago

    Don’t know how it’s implemented on Windows, but I have been using and loving this feature for decades on Linux, it allows you to have several workspaces and assigning different shortcut, so for example regardless of where I’am, if I hit Super+1 I get taken straight to my browser, and Super+9 takes me to Spotify, no need to be alt+, tabbing until I get the window I’m looking for.

  • @SoggyBread@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    57 months ago

    I use it at work to switch between my email+ticket desktop, my coding desktop+firefox, and my slacking off desktop. It makes it easy for me to organize things

  • @AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    37 months ago

    If it’s anything like Mac’s, it’s a cleaner way to jump between apps without having to constantly adjust your windows. While I work, I have a desktop for Photoshop, Illustrator, Chrome, and one for both Slack and Outlook.

  • @mindlight@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    27 months ago

    I run my game on one desktop… Swap quickly to the second desktop with Ctrl+win+right/left, open Firefox and Google whatever I need and then back into the game…

  • @Discover5164@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    27 months ago

    i’m on Linux and i use a grid of 20 desktops… on 2 screens. (so 40 desktops total) but generally it’s a single window per desktop. i have tiling, so windows don’t overlap with each other