SU and Dual Monitors - Worth the Trouble?
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That's very strange. I will frequently have three or four instances of SketchUp open at once. I'm running XP Pro but I would think Windows7 should be able to handle that, too. Have you looked at the computer's performance graph in the Task Manager (I assume that's still available in Windows 7) when you are running SketchUp and open the second session?
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@dave r said:
That's very strange. I will frequently have three or four instances of SketchUp open at once. I'm running XP Pro but I would think Windows7 should be able to handle that, too. Have you looked at the computer's performance graph in the Task Manager (I assume that's still available in Windows 7) when you are running SketchUp and open the second session?
I'm running Windows 7 Ultimate, and I've never had a problem running multiple instances of SketchUp (7 or 8).
And yes, Win7 still has the Task Manager, and it still allows you to get at it the easy way (Ctrl/Shift/Esc).
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Do it.
Now!p
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Do it.
Now!p
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I really can't justify having to use smaller monitors just to get this setup to work. I buy large monitors because I don't like small monitors, and having to force myself to look at two small monitors all day just to make a dual screen setup function is simply not worth it. To me.
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So, HNB, here's just a FWIW. I made a screen shot of my SketchUp setup. This is on a 25" monitor. the drawing window is about 1600 pixels wide and 1015 high. I think there's plenty of room for drawing and for the stuff I've put on the side. I don't think you'll have a problem with that sort of layout. I rarely ever find any need for a wider view when I'm working in SketchUp. It's slightly wider (longer) than a standard sheet of paper which is usually what I need to fit my images to anyway.
If you add a second screen, you can use it for references while you draw on your main screen.
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I have a dual monitor setup - sort of. My primary monitor plugs into my main computer. My secondary monitor plugs into a four-channel KVM. My main computer uses one of the four channels, the other three go to other machines. While I will often use the secondary monitor as a reference, I usually do so through a separate machine (so as to conserve resources on my primary computer). As time has gone on, I have found that I rarely use my dual monitor setup in a 'true' fashion (both monitors driven by one machine).
At the end of the day, though, I feel that this is all just a matter of personal preference. Some people have a workflow that demands dual monitors. Some prefer to work with one monitor and multiple windows. I think the best idea is the one you explored earlier - try it out in a variety of ways and see which one works for you.
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I couldn't possibly go back to a single monitor again. Both at home and at work, I use a dual 24" monitor setup. 1920x1080 at work, 1920x1200 at home.
It allows you to full screen one app and use another thing such as a web browser on the 2nd. I can also drag my materials box and anything else over there so it's out of the way of my main window.
Only problem is now that when I use my laptop, I find it really hard to adjust back to the single screen.
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if you can't scroll all that way (!) back and forth between monitors...... sounds like you need to use shortcuts!
dual screens is waaaaay better (for me) i do it just the way you mention - one clear screen with just model and everything else in the other. oh and i have a keyboard and mouse on my desk.
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My preference is a single 30" display with
2560x1600
resolution and 16:10 aspect ratio for clear images and exceptional multitasking.
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