![]() I was surprised at how well it works, apps can run in full screen mode or however you want to set them up to run. To view the feed of the "virtual" displays you need OBS to view the output, and a physical display to actually see anything. The advantage here is that windows will treat these as 4 physical displays allowing you to run full screen apps on any of them. Once the virtual adapters are setup, you can open OBS and get a feed from the two virtual displays to a physical display. The third image shows the two physical dp cables and the two virtual adapter plugs ( ). The second image shows 2 displays working as 3 physical displays. I am wondering if it will just be easier to add another physical monitor. I can probably use that but I switching from one input to another needs hardware buttons and it is quite slow. My monitor (Dell Ultrasharp 38) does have multiple inputs and can show two screen side by side. But I am unable to figure out how that will work: my laptop has only one HDMI port. ![]() One comment I came across says the only way to do this is by using a dummy display emulator adapter. I came across some exotic approaches such as modifying terminal server dll and rdpwrapper but I cannot tell if they do what I need. I thought of RDP to my localhost but that of course does not work. This is because I need to share multiple windows with a customer but ensure they do not see all of my windows. None of these address my use-case: When I share (in Teams) etc the "entire screen" that should only share one of these virtual desktops. There are other paid tools that I haven't tried, Actual Tools and iShadow Virtual Display Manager, but they seem to be doing the same thing. This applies to DisplayFusion and nView Desktop. *(I'm trying to get nView working, because Windows Virtual Desktop doesn't yet allow for Desktop renaming, and because the right-click menus, and the taskbar UI of nView, is so much better than the Windows implementation.There are many similar questions but most of the answers mention a tool that splits a single desktop into different areas and make it easy to move windows from one area to another, maximize in an area etc. Obviously, if someone knows why it's automatically disabling, and how to stop that, that would be even better. I'm hoping that this information can be useful in:ġ) somehow telling Windows to start this application when Windows startsĢ) writing some ?script? that can keep the process running, or re- Enable it if it automatically Disables. I also notice that Start in has "C:\Program Files\NVIDIA Corporation\nview".finding nView Desktop Manager link in my start menu.I found this question on how to automatically start nView at Windows boot, but unfortunately, the answers there are not very helpful as there is no exe file to start the manager, but it did get me to find the following information.Ĭ:\Windows\System32\rundll32.exe "C:\Program Files\NVIDIA Corporation\nview\nvwdmcpl.dll", nViewMain I can't imagine that this is the way it is supposed to "work". Or any ideas how to keep it from disabling itself? But it partially defeats software's the purpose, if I have to keep telling it to start running again.ĭoes anybody have a workaround to have it re-start automatically? I do not notice any trigger action either.įortunately, it remembers my settings. The time it runs before disabling varies. This means I need to open the nView Desktop Manager again, then re Enable, for it to begin working again. It runs fine for a while, then automatically disables. ![]() I open the nView Desktop Mananger and Enable. For reference I have NVidia Quadro P3000 notebook card. I'm running the latest version (149.77) of nView Desktop Manager on Windows 10 圆4.
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