Quote:
Originally Posted by Anonymouse
True. Even Windows 7 and 8 allowed for dual screens; I imagine it'd be simpler in Windows 10 to just define the second screen as a new device (and doubtless harder in 11 - I don't like the way it does some things, or that there are one or two things it can't do, whereas earlier versions could). Back in '16 my manager used two screens routinely; I think it was possible to do what they did in Avatar, i.e. pass data from one device to another. I think. 
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Hahaha I was running multi screen set ups in the early 2000s. My old Geforce 2 MX440 shipped with VGA and SVideo to composite so used to run that to the TV. Most cards had DSUB and DVI so could extend or clone way back to ME and XP OSs never tried with Win98 but it always worked when I did want it too
Windows 11 just sees the screens like all operating systems before it. I run 3 screens all the time and have my TV and Projector connected. They can all run at the same time extended or cloned however I choose. It is all very simple and always has been