

- #Moom totalspaces 1080p#
- #Moom totalspaces driver#
- #Moom totalspaces full#
- #Moom totalspaces windows 10#
The Moon displays these eight phases one after the other as it moves through its cycle each month. 🌘 Waning Crescent: In the Northern Hemisphere, we see the waning crescent phase as a thin crescent of light on the left. It is the opposite half as illuminated in the first quarter moon. 🌗 Third Quarter: We see the third quarter moon as a half moon, too.
#Moom totalspaces full#
🌖 Waning Gibbous: The waning gibbous phase is between a full moon and a half moon.

🌕 Full: We can see the Moon completely illuminated during full moons. 🌔 Waxing Gibbous: The waxing gibbous phase is between a half moon and full moon. 🌓 First Quarter: We see the first quarter phase as a half moon. 🌒 Waxing Crescent: In the Northern Hemisphere, we see the waxing crescent phase as a thin crescent of light on the right. 🌑 New: We cannot see the Moon when it is a new moon. During the new moon, the side facing Earth is dark. At that point, the far side of the Moon is facing the Sun. Eventually, the Moon reaches a point in its orbit when we don’t see any of the Moon illuminated. When we have a full view of the completely illuminated side of the Moon, that phase is known as a full moon.īut following the night of each full moon, as the Moon orbits around Earth, we start to see less of the Moon lit by the Sun. On Earth, our view of the illuminated part of the Moon changes each night, depending on where the Moon is in its orbit, or path, around Earth.
#Moom totalspaces windows 10#
I've been extremely happy combining the ultra-wide with macOS and using Rectangle (which replaces FancyZones on Windows 10 for me) to "tile" windows all over the place.The position of the Moon and the Sun during Each of the Moon’s phases and the Moon as it appears from Earth during each phase. I believe I'm getting a 120Hz refresh rate too. It's at that point you can choose the correct "5120x1440" native resolution for the monitor. That being said I still had to go into the display settings in macOS and change the resolution from "Default for display" to "Scaled". The moment I plugged in the dock and then plugged the monitor into it via Display Port it worked flawlessly. The CalDigit "dock" solved this as it exposes a Display Port (1.2) option to the Mac. I don't know why this is (because I don't really know much about displays or display protocols - I don't care to neither) but I tried a few cables and adapters and it gave me an odd resolution (3840x1080 I think) and a pink tint over the whole display. This is because macOS cannot correctly render to the monitor over HDMI. Long story short I had to use a previously bought "CalDigit Thunderbolt Station 3 Plus" (a dock, basically) to get the monitor to work correctly. Now I've switched back to using my 2020 13" MBP, and thus macOS, as my work horse.
#Moom totalspaces 1080p#
It was absolutely the right move to shift from 2 or 3 1080p monitors to a single 49" ultra-wide unit. I've been using a Samsung C49RG9x (49" ultra-wide) on Windows 10 for about four months. I’m keen on giving them a try whenever I end up back on a mac workstation, but I cannot deny that my Divvy lifetime license has served me incredibly well for years, with support through many big OS upgrades. It’s interesting to see all of these alternative, perhaps even _better_ / more robust / more FOSS friendly mac WMs being listed here. Perhaps one of these days I will find the time to dive back into arch and configure a _truly_ efficient and customized workstation / dev env :-) While not as robust as a custom arch setup with a tiling WM like awesome, Mutter is quite good and everything PopOS offers out of the box has been fantastic.

#Moom totalspaces driver#
I recently (2ish years ago) switched from mac to a Debian then eventually Pop OS setup for my daily driver development environment. It wasn’t fantastic, but I could set up custom keybinds and it was “reminiscent” of those tiling WMs I found so much love for as a pre-adolescent. Daily drove mac for 5-7 years after a childhood of tinkering with Linux installs (no professional development) and falling in love with an AwesomeWM setup with custom keybinds.Īfter getting into professional dev during / after high school I ended up using Divvy for an OSX window manager.
