Blog

Notes from VirtualZones

Product thinking, Windows internals, and getting more out of a big monitor.

July 11, 2026comparison

iShadow Virtual Display Manager alternatives (and how VirtualZones compares)

iShadow VDM, DisplayFusion, and Actual Multiple Monitors are the paid ways to split a monitor into virtual displays. Here's how they compare on price, fullscreen confinement, and footprint.

July 10, 2026fancyzones

Does FancyZones work with fullscreen apps? (and what to do instead)

FancyZones intentionally ignores native-fullscreen apps and games — they take over the whole monitor. Here's why, and how to actually keep a fullscreen app inside one zone.

July 9, 2026product

Why I built a 180 KB alternative to FancyZones + RegionToShare

The case for one tiny native tool that does zone layouts, fullscreen confinement, and single-zone sharing — instead of three separate apps.

July 8, 2026ultrawide

How to split an ultrawide monitor into separate sections on Windows

Four ways to divide an ultrawide or super-ultrawide monitor into usable sections on Windows — from built-in Snap Layouts to making fullscreen apps behave like separate monitors.

July 6, 2026screen-sharing

How to share part of your screen in Zoom, Teams, or OBS

Zoom and Teams have no built-in way to share just one region of your screen. Here are the real options, including sharing a single zone through the native share picker.

July 4, 2026fancyzones

The best FancyZones alternatives for Windows (2026)

A practical roundup of FancyZones alternatives — tiling window managers, grid snappers, and zone tools — and how to pick based on whether you need fullscreen confinement or region sharing.

July 2, 2026virtual-monitor

Turn one monitor into multiple virtual monitors — without a display driver

Virtual-display drivers can split one screen into several, but they add software to your graphics stack. Here's the driver-free way to get separate-monitor behavior on Windows.

June 30, 2026ultrawide

Getting the most out of a 49-inch super ultrawide (32:9) for productivity

A 49-inch 32:9 monitor is really three monitors in one panel. Here's how to lay it out into zones so it works like a triple-monitor setup for real work.