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