"No problem," he muttered. "Just a bug."
And that is why, to this day, Adrian uses a single, maximized window. One window. One zone. One app at a time. He’s since bought a second monitor just to hold his wallpaper. He doesn't move anything onto it. He just likes the way the light reflects off the empty, untiled, beautifully chaotic void. tiling windows 11
He assigned hotkeys: Win+Ctrl+1 through Win+Ctrl+4 . He felt like a wizard. "No problem," he muttered
The first sign of trouble came that evening. He was closing a browser tab, and his cursor twitched. The browser didn't just close—it un-tiled . It shrank, shuddered, and tried to snap itself into a zone that no longer existed because he'd switched layouts ten minutes ago. A ghost window, half-rendered, hovered over his desktop like a poltergeist. He had to kill it via Task Manager. One zone
Adrian, a software developer with three screens and zero attention span, clicked.