Ok, this is getting humorous. Same computer (work laptop, MacBook Pro Mid 2010). Different observation. Just curious if anyone else noticed this "feature".
Because I've had such wonderful ergonomic training at my university, I have my laptop elevated on a box, so the screen is closer to eye level, hence the need for the external keyboard that was having issues earlier discussed.
Today, my desk is particularly messy (paperwork for a show is spread out everywhere), so to keep my iPhone handy, I placed it on the elevated laptop, in the left palm area. It looks like, if I place the phone in just the right place, the computer thinks it's been docked/closed, the built in screen goes dark, and all windows shift to the external. Kinda entertaining, if it wasn't so bloody annoying. Give it a try.
Of course, now that I'm actually trying to find the sweet spot, to describe for y'all, and to learn the avoid this zone", it won't do the magic trick.
Ah! Got it to do it again, but it looks like if you tease it a couple times (screen dims and restores quickly as you move the phone around) it understands not to dim anymore. I dunno. But, the sweet spot (with an iPhone 6) is the rear camera to hit the little gulley around the "fn" button.
PLEASE TELL ME, this is happening to someone else.
Well, I've transitioned from Windows 10 back to Linux on my main computer. I still have Windows 10 installed on another hard drive if I want to boot into it for something, but I haven't done much on my computer that strictly required Windows for quite awhile now. My wife has talked about using Linux instead of Windows on her Laptop since she's read about privacy issues with Windows so I investigated a few distros and ended up switching myself. This also saves me the need of hunting down which shell extension in my Windows setup causes Windows Explorer to hang every so often. (Not Internet Explorer which wouldn't be a big deal, but Windows Explorer which means the desktop stops responding and is pretty annoying).
I looked the various desktops that aren't real weird or primitive: KDE 5, Gnome, Unity, Cinnamon, Mate, Xfce, Pantheon, and Lxde. I thought I'd end up using a beta of the latest Ubuntu with Gnome updated to the very latest, but I'm liking Cinnamon better. It looks like my copy of MS Office 2007 will run okay on Linux with wine, but so far I haven't found a need to use it with what I do. I have the latest version of Libreoffice installed and it seems to have come a good ways since the last time I used it.
My computer now looks kinda like a hybrid between a Mac and Windows 7.
[link]
Anyhow, so far so good.
I killed the thread with Linux. Sorry.
For fun go to your command line and issue the trace route command for the domain name 'bad.horse', upping the max hops to 60 or so.
Linux> traceroute -m 60 bad.horse
Windows> tracert -h 60 bad.horse
Mac> traceroute -m 60 bad.horse
Then wait for it... I love geeks.
Hah, indeed.
So, I've got something weird happening on my media machine. It's a six year old Win 7 machine that I set up a year and a half ago with an SSD boot drive and two large hard drives. Today when I went to boot it up, I got a "Loading Windows XP" splash screen, then a blue screen o' death followed by an instant reboot. Multiple reboots produce variations of the same thing. The thing is, the Win 7 installation was wasn't an upgrade. There shouldn't be any Win XP boot detritus, right?
I filmed one of the boot failures to capture the BSOD as it zipped by, but it was generic message, without any error info. I suspect that it must be a problem with the SSD, but it's showing up in the post sequence.
I tried doing a repair from an install disk, but no joy. I'm still getting the same routine. Any thoughts?
For fun go to your command line and issue the trace route command for the domain name 'bad.horse'
I will be posting this elsewhere...
I have zero Windows help, but hi DX!!