On Fri, 29 Jul 2011, Joshua Penix wrote:
Other trick I've used is to click on the missing window in the task bar
to focus it, then right click the task bar and pick "Move". Then you
should be able to hold down the appropriate cursor key to move it back
onto the visible desktop.
I've never t
Try using Alt-Space to open that window's top left menu, hit m for move,
hit an arrow key to activate the movement, then use the mouse to move
the window where you want it.
--Ted
On 7/29/2011 11:18 AM, Matt Lawrence wrote:
On Fri, 29 Jul 2011, Yves Dorfsman wrote:
On 2011-07-29 12:04, Matt
On Jul 29, 2011, at 11:18 AM, Matt Lawrence wrote:
> Tried that. It doesn't work, the windows just somewhere out in nevernever
> land.
Other trick I've used is to click on the missing window in the task bar to
focus it, then right click the task bar and pick "Move". Then you should be
able t
On Fri, 29 Jul 2011, Yves Dorfsman wrote:
On 2011-07-29 12:04, Matt Lawrence wrote:
At work they use Citrix and Remote Desktop for access from home. I'm
running
into a problem that the monitors on the second video adapter, which are
also
to the left of my primary (Windows XP) screen, don't
On 2011-07-29 12:04, Matt Lawrence wrote:
At work they use Citrix and Remote Desktop for access from home. I'm running
into a problem that the monitors on the second video adapter, which are also
to the left of my primary (Windows XP) screen, don't show up in the Remote
Desktop session. Having to
At work they use Citrix and Remote Desktop for access from home. I'm
running into a problem that the monitors on the second video adapter,
which are also to the left of my primary (Windows XP) screen, don't show
up in the Remote Desktop session. Having to kill everything on those
screens and