Hacker News Viewer

Improving my focus by giving up my big monitor

by Fudgel on 4/1/2026, 5:28:59 AM

https://ounapuu.ee/posts/2026/04/01/focus/

Comments

by: Leomuck

Interesting take. I regularly switch between just the laptop and my 3 monitor setup. Sometimes I feel like I could use a 4th one because there is just so much stuff to look at when developing. When I get to my laptop I sometimes feel like I can&#x27;t be really productive on it. Having to tab all the time is not in itself an issue, but I keep getting lost when I have multiple instances of an app open - e.g. IDE. Say you have 3 projects open, I feel like I keep tabbing to the wrong one all the time.<p>But overall, I do like the idea that you don&#x27;t actually have to see everything at once. Also takes focus away I guess. I would love to see a study on this which tries to actually measure this.

4/3/2026, 4:25:47 PM


by: prhn

I learned this lesson a couple decades ago.<p>Managing windows with OS idiosyncrasies becomes a task in itself.<p>However, I&#x27;ve also learned recently it depends what you&#x27;re doing.<p>Software development, I just want one single maximized window on a single laptop monitor. If I have a near-retina DPI monitor with 120hz+ (I can&#x27;t deal with low DPI fuzziness and low refresh all day) I&#x27;ll usually have a 3-4 window layout on a single monitor with the IDE taking up half the screen.<p>There is a minor cognitive hit from switching focus between monitors for things like reading documentation, so I don&#x27;t like doing that.<p>Music production? Man, I could probably use like 3+ monitors. Main stems view, a separate monitor for open VSTs, a separate monitor for video, a separate one for piano roll maybe. The window juggling gets really cumbersome on a single monitor.<p>My friend who is a professional musician (makes music for TV shows) uses 3 large TVs for music production.

4/3/2026, 4:04:20 PM


by: makeitrain

I’ve had a 38” ultrawide for about a decade.<p>I’d say monitor position and ergonomics matter way more than screen size.<p>Navigating a stack of apps with alt+tab, ctrl+tab is extremely efficient. I only miss the extra space when looking at spreadsheets or comparing things in different windows.<p>Some laptops have a pitiful screen height, avoid those.<p>Ultrawide is an extra screen size that many web devs forget about. Good design can take advantage of it. But some fluid designs look terrible without constraints.<p>I ran a vertical setup, with a monitor above my laptop. Not a bad way to go if you want more space for auxiliary apps.<p>Focus is essential for productivity. Do whatever it takes to get there.

4/3/2026, 3:42:45 PM


by: aenis

I was wondering about this for a while now.<p>My main home office has 5 monitors, and i still have to swipe between desktops regularly. I used to have 6, but two ultrawides stacked one above the other was a bit painful and I developed a back pain after a while.<p>My on the road setup typically involves a folding portable monitor (asus zenscreen duo, or something to that effect - that is 2x 1080p). Easily enough, and I don&#x27;t really see a decrease in my efficiency.<p>But I sometimes do long distance flights and then I code&#x2F;work on a single screen. I absolutely can do the same thing that I can do with my 6 screen setup with almost not noticeable effect on productivity as well. Could it be that the extra screens are just useless and an illusion of added productivity?

4/3/2026, 4:34:10 PM


by: Xcelerate

It depends what I&#x27;m working on. If it&#x27;s a bunch of interdependent systems that involve a large amount of data, a giant monitor is better. If the giant monitor is being used to make visible more application surfaces (Slack, email, VS Code, etc.), it makes focus worse.<p>The biggest improvement I&#x27;ve found for my focus is to <i>force myself</i> to close any open tabs&#x2F;windows that are not absolutely necessary roughly every two hours. I used to be one of those people with 800 tabs open in the browser and 20 application windows spread across 8 desktop spaces. Was a concentration mess. Requiring myself to &quot;clean up&quot; periodically has really helped.

4/3/2026, 4:33:44 PM


by: plqbfbv

Perhaps the problem isn&#x27;t the BigScreen, it&#x27;s the youtube video?<p>I normally run applications maximized on my 28&quot; 4k, unless I need input from 2 applications at the same time, then I tile them.<p>Working from my work-issued 16&quot; Macbook Pro or any other of my laptops is a pain because of the limited estate - it&#x27;s hard to see patterns at a glance or get the whole context when I can only see 30 lines of text that is truncated at &lt;=80 columns. Plus, the fact that the keyboard isn&#x27;t detachable from the screen forces bad habits on the posture.

4/3/2026, 4:39:10 PM


by: kshacker

I gave up my monitor pre-covid, a few years earlier than that actually, and have not looked back.<p>The only thing that does make me wonder at times is that my video in a zoom&#x27;ish app looks different than other people&#x27;s video in some manner, but all that means is that maybe I need 1 backup and mirrored display for video calls, but maybe I can live with it.

4/3/2026, 4:42:08 PM


by: noduerme

I&#x27;ve been a laptop purist most of my life, and prefer to work outside my house &#x2F; office. Only recently I got a Big Monitor™ for a mini pc. It&#x27;s really messed with my head. Now when I look at my 15&quot; laptop everything looks incredibly small. Not just that, but the scroll direction is opposite on the pc, so if I&#x27;m working side by side I find myself accidentally scrolling each one backwards, or actually typing into the wrong keyboard. Somehow I survived this long with just laptop screens and I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s a mistake that my focus was preserved through that.

4/1/2026, 5:49:43 AM


by: jasonpeacock

I just upgraded to a 49&quot; curved display because it lets me view everything I need _for the current task_ at one time.<p>One virtual desktop is Messages, Slack, and Outlook for all my comms needs.<p>Another is IDE &amp; browser for development work.<p>Another is todo list, planner, notes, and browser for task management.<p>Having to constantly swap app between browser, email, IDE, slack, etc is interruptive. Being able to switch to a single-focus desktop with everything visible is much more productive for me and reduces context switching.

4/3/2026, 4:03:26 PM


by: 0xfaded

The MacOS window manager is so bad that I&#x27;ve resorted to three monitors plus the built in screen. Two monitors have fullscreen terminal emulators and the last has the browser. The built-in screen handles all the distracting stuff whenever I can be bothered to look down at it.<p>With Xmonad I had 10 spaces on a single laptop screen (actually however many I wanted) with the flick of a button. And yes, I know about hacks like aerospace and the others that require disabling system integrity

4/3/2026, 4:43:11 PM


by: edoloughlin

I switched to Niri (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;niri-wm&#x2F;niri" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;niri-wm&#x2F;niri</a>) about six months ago and I find it does wonders for focus.<p>Set the default window width to 1&#x2F;4 or 1&#x2F;3 of the screen width (depending on the screen size) and it&#x27;s easy to keep just the right context visible.

4/3/2026, 4:47:54 PM


by: bdcravens

I do enjoy rocking multiple monitors, but even if I went to one, I&#x27;d still have to use a big monitor. My mind may be young but my almost 50 year old eyes aren&#x27;t. (I actually run my 32 inch monitors in QHD mode)

4/3/2026, 4:27:50 PM


by: bitexploder

There is something powerful about environment and what it does to our minds. For the author, giving up the monitor is totally valid and may work for many people. I can often convince myself to chance a habit by adding a simple extra physical step. This is harder on a computer. It takes discipline to not just end up with dozens of windows and even more browser tabs in some roles. I just aggressively close windows when starting a new task or thinking. Most likely you don&#x27;t need whatever you are closing :)

4/3/2026, 4:29:52 PM


by: NikolaNovak

Like everything else in life, it depends :<p>* I feel the key message here is &quot;single vs multiple windows&quot;, not small vs big monitor. I love my 32&quot; curved monitor. I too switched from having three monitors to having just one big monitor and staying with one maximizing window majority of time.<p>It&#x27;s also role dependant. I spent few years as ops manager and multiple windows and situational awareness &#x2F; task parallelization were important. Not saying it&#x27;s a good thing but it was the name of the game.<p>Even without task parallelization, multiple windows are important for some roles. If I&#x27;m transforming a working excel into executive slide, it&#x27;s nice to have them both up. If you are good at taking notes, having teams meeting and one note up is a life saver and super power. Etc<p>But yes - I think core message is &quot;do not assume that prevalent wisdom or what others do, works for your task, job, and personality&quot;. As another example, I think dark mode is cool, all my cool friends use it, and it does <i>not</i> work for me on majority of applications. And that&#x27;s ok... Not everybody is cool like that :-)

4/3/2026, 3:39:11 PM


by: UnhappyMeaning

I&#x27;ve tried every set up that I have the privilage of having:<p>- 11in Macbook Air<p>- 16in Macbook Pro<p>- 1 X 27in monitor mounted with MB Pro in clamshell mode<p>- Linux Mint desktop on old Dell Inspiron with 4gb of RAM<p>and after using all of these to try and increase my productivity, I&#x27;m still an unfocused and possibly ADD riddled human. I&#x27;m not cut from the same cloth as my other productive peers who do not watch much YouTube and can type away at a black `vim` terminal on one half of their screen with software documentation on the other half of the screen.

4/3/2026, 4:24:18 PM


by: ronb1964

I went the opposite direction. I&#x27;m running a 45&quot; LG UltraGear curved ultrawide OLED at 3440x1440. At first I thought the real estate would make me more productive. What actually happened is I have apps spread across the whole thing and spend more time rearranging windows than working. The article makes a fair point — a smaller screen forces you to commit to one thing at a time. I&#x27;m not ready to give mine up, but I can&#x27;t argue with the logic.&quot;

4/3/2026, 4:24:53 PM


by: sibeliuss

This was my secret weapon for years. My coworkers could never understand my focus and productivity and were always surprised when I said that it was due to working from a tiny laptop screen, and no more.

4/3/2026, 4:16:27 PM


by: binkHN

No thank you. While I&#x27;m productive when mobile on my 14” 2.8K screen, I&#x27;m more productive with the extra headroom on my single 27” 4K at the office.

4/3/2026, 4:09:52 PM


by: Kuyawa

I&#x27;ve used a cheap 50&quot; TV as monitor for almost a decade now and I can&#x27;t complain. Sight is 20&#x2F;20 at 60yo, no eye strain, no headaches, nothing. I only use it for coding (sublime) and browsing (brave), so I don&#x27;t care about resolution&#x2F;retina&#x2F;pixels&#x2F;colors&#x2F;curvature&#x2F;etc.

4/3/2026, 4:23:02 PM


by: PeterStuer

I went from triple 1440p to just two, but I am going to go back. I guess it al depends on the type of work you do. I know managers that just use their phone.

4/3/2026, 4:03:56 PM


by: chrisra

I feel the same way. In general, I prefer working on a couch with my laptop. My eyes aren&#x27;t great and I end up ruining my posture at a desk, invariably.

4/3/2026, 4:48:25 PM


by: daniel-ash

I love alt+tab way too much to ever go back to multi screen.<p>A different angle: multiple screens can cause neck problems if you’re tilting your head in a weird direction for too long

4/3/2026, 4:42:17 PM


by: convexly

Went from ultrawide back to my 27 inch monitor and definitely feel more focused. Having everything open &quot;just in case&quot; was killing my output. Nothing alt+tab can&#x27;t fix.

4/3/2026, 4:34:25 PM


by: ben8bit

I was actually wondering about this a few months ago; if big monitors work against focus. There is something zen about having a limited amount of screen real estate &amp; focusing on 1 thing at a time.

4/3/2026, 4:29:33 PM


by: gambutin

Being able to de-focus is actually quite useful.<p>Imagine sitting through those lengthy team calls and having to concentrate on BS for 1-2 hours.<p>Nah, I’d rather focus on getting things done in the meantime.

4/3/2026, 3:50:44 PM


by: Surac

went from 27&quot; Mint to 13&quot; Mac Book Neo. I&#x27;m extreme astonished how this has changed my workflow. Smaller screen realy works better for me. The change from Mint to MacOS was not hard and most programs are the same.

4/3/2026, 4:28:52 PM


by: psyclobe

I will never give up my 5k2k LG 32 inch lcd. Single is best I do agree.

4/3/2026, 3:59:17 PM


by: deep_noz

reading the title I thought it&#x27;s a relationship advice...

4/3/2026, 4:11:02 PM


by: bitwize

Oooooh, 30. Getting up there, old man! Wait till you hit your 40s and your vision starts going... you&#x27;re gonna want a big-ass monitor then!

4/3/2026, 3:53:57 PM


by: FpUser

I used to have 3 4K monitors. At some point this has become highly irritating messy. Now all my desktop PCs have single 32&quot; 4K monitor and no scaling. This is &quot;small&quot; enough to keep my focus and yet large enough to arrange windows in a manner I like. Main being development IDE vertically on the right and the UI I debug &#x2F; test vertically on the left be it browser or pure desktop app.

4/3/2026, 3:54:09 PM


by: 2OEH8eoCRo0

I went the other direction. I bought a Dell 40&quot; for productivity and I feel like the increased real estate only clutters and distracts.

4/3/2026, 3:47:11 PM


by: jasonmp85

[dead]

4/3/2026, 3:52:02 PM