I've never really understood what Apple expects users to do with what they call desktops.
The only tool I've ever found which works for me is one which seems to be no longer available, called Project Desktops, though there is a trial which still seems to work.
Basically it allows you to name different spaces - let's for the moment call them Repositories, though PD calls them Desktops, and all the files which are littered all over the desktop screen space are swept away. It's possible to switch between these, and regain all the clutter if you want to.
This is immensely useful if you want to do a Zoom presentation, and are preparing a talk. You can work in one space, generate the presentation, then have the whole thing swept clear with the exception of the file or files you need for the talk.
I found various "explanations"/"apologies" for what Apple thinks it has done in sites such as Stack Exchange - https://apple.stackexchange.com/ques...m-be-different which suggests that there are other users out there who have addled brains like mine who either dislike what Apple has done, or just can't fathom out what one is supposed to do with this all.
On several occasions I have tried to figure this out, but in the end I nearly always just go to PD and get on with it. Life is too short to try to understand why Apple thinks users are doing this sort of thing "wrong".
I still have copies of PD which work on machines when PD was readily available, and I have found that generally these do transfer between machines. It might be available (and possibly supported) in the App store in the US.
It's not perfect, and there are still problems, but as a tool which solves more than 95% of problems, I'll take it.
See http://www.project-desktops.com/ - and this looks as though it's not been updated for years.
The only tool I've ever found which works for me is one which seems to be no longer available, called Project Desktops, though there is a trial which still seems to work.
Basically it allows you to name different spaces - let's for the moment call them Repositories, though PD calls them Desktops, and all the files which are littered all over the desktop screen space are swept away. It's possible to switch between these, and regain all the clutter if you want to.
This is immensely useful if you want to do a Zoom presentation, and are preparing a talk. You can work in one space, generate the presentation, then have the whole thing swept clear with the exception of the file or files you need for the talk.
I found various "explanations"/"apologies" for what Apple thinks it has done in sites such as Stack Exchange - https://apple.stackexchange.com/ques...m-be-different which suggests that there are other users out there who have addled brains like mine who either dislike what Apple has done, or just can't fathom out what one is supposed to do with this all.
On several occasions I have tried to figure this out, but in the end I nearly always just go to PD and get on with it. Life is too short to try to understand why Apple thinks users are doing this sort of thing "wrong".
I still have copies of PD which work on machines when PD was readily available, and I have found that generally these do transfer between machines. It might be available (and possibly supported) in the App store in the US.
It's not perfect, and there are still problems, but as a tool which solves more than 95% of problems, I'll take it.
See http://www.project-desktops.com/ - and this looks as though it's not been updated for years.
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