It's been a while since we ran a story about some facet of people's home computer systems and I got to wondering what kind of monitor setup other Soylentils have at home. (If you have multiple systems, feel free to enumerate each setup.)
For example, I run Win 7 Pro on a Dell laptop which has a Mobile Intel Core 2 P8700 Duo processor and which sports NVIDIA Quadro NVS 160M graphics. Instead of using the built-in laptop display, I have a several-year-old Gateway monitor with 1920x1200 resolution @ 59Hz and 32-bit color. I do not do any gaming, so I don't need the latest graphic card/monitor.
Some time down the road, though, I'd like to get a new computer and am thinking about a multi-monitor setup. I'd like at least 1920x1200 across 3 screens, though I'd not mind it if I could afford 3 x 4K screens. I'd like it to be compatible with some flavor of Linux or *BSD, preferably without systemd. Does anyone here have experience with that kind of setup? What OS do you use? What graphics card? What monitors and resolutions do you run?
I know there are some gamers on the site, as well. Here's a chance to brag a bit about your rig!
And, of course, please share any horror stories and/or triumphs, too!
(Score: 2) by VLM on Monday August 22 2016, @12:13AM
At a former employer you could have up to six monitors (2x3 organization) and I tried it and a new problem AC forgot to mention is mental context switches and mapping such that rather than looking at monitor #5 when you're focused on #2 you'll physical context switch #2 because its a lot of state to keep in mind.
I suppose life is different if you have a job like monitoring atomic reactors #1 thru #6 inclusive where the mapping is simple, vs having six generic viewports into your task.
When I had five monitors I would sometimes leave one on email and one on IRC/messaging and it mostly just increased stress and distraction, although it was sometimes useful. So stress is another interesting aspect.