

I never had this issue when just connecting one session.ġ) made sure I was using ethernet not wireless. Then I am forced to reopen the session and select the monitor I want. No Error to reconnect, no error message box, just disappears. The main problem I am running into right now, is randomly a session window will just crash / close. However it does not seem as stable as I would want it to be. For now I do the following.ġ) Connect one session to the host, and select monitor1Ģ) Connect second session to host, and select monitor2 I actually found the link yesterday after posting. I did find a work around based off the link you shared. If it is still covered by the always-on-top. Another way is to hit Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open the Task Manager. If this does not work for you, try to hit Alt + Space to open the application menu and click (or use the keyboard) to choose Restore or Minimize. For this reason I cannot provide you with a thanks for the details, looking forward to the feature implementation. The usual way to get into and out of full screen mode is by using the F11 key. Regarding your question about a link to the Feature Request, we made the decision to no longer publish our internal development roadmap. Work on the feature you are interested in may start after that. Development priorities are currently on NoMachine Network (and v9. Unfortunately, we cannot give a definitive ETA.
Nomachine exit full screen windows#
In each of these separate windows users will be able to apply all the usual settings, like applying a different scaling factor, resizing the window to any size, sending the window to fullscreen and placing the window in any desired location.” What you are interested in is written in the second part of my response “For a later version, we are going to implement the possibility to have multi-monitors on the server side which can be managed as separate windows on multi-monitors client side. I recently wrote a response to a similar question which you can see here:

Currently with multi-monitors client side, it’s possible for virtual Linux desktop sessions (Enterprise products only) to be spanned on all monitors or to a specific monitor.
