Mission Control, which is built into Mac OS, allows for having multiple virtual desktop spaces. Stepping back and forth between desktops can be done by pressing a combination of keyboard keys, touching the trackpad or opening the Mission Control option. It has various functions, from which the most important one is that you can have your tools divided in various places so that you can multitask, but it is very easy to make wrong decisions and not to remember where a particular function is stored. To illustrate the point, the desks don’t have the signages so you can’t immediately tell if it’s yours.
Spaceman is a utility that helps you arrange up to sixteen virtual desktops in an intuitive and productive fashion on your macOS device.
Our space app solving this issue is called “Spaceman” and it is free and open-source. This app is located in the menu bar and displays squares representing your virtual desktops: while you have a black desktop, they both are supposed to be grey. You can give them numbers or address them personally, depending on whether you want to do them in a certain way.
By default, head to GitHub to fetch the latest version and install it. Open the app in the menu bar, the application will just launch. Feel free to do it the way you want: just hold down the command button, and drag it to the right side. You are the one who is decide it.
This app will not only show on your main board your Mission Control desktops, but also any opened app in full screen. This ability might be useful to have all of your windows in full screen if you do this frequently.
Free, light, discrete, effective/worldwide/appreciated, when will it happen?
In addition, you can tune it a bit to your requirements. In this case, the number or a simple number, where desired, can be displayed inside the rectangle instead of the number itself; Otherwise the custom name can be defined for each one, which is an option as well. Naming our desks shouldn’t be more than three letters. That’s pretty limited, but it’s enough to get a clear idea of what each desk needs.
You can run one unit RED (writing), another one REC (research), comparing to commonly seen one COM (communication), and maybe one last unit FUN (fun). For example, this may help distinguish different workroom areas as you move about during a typical day.
We close this piece by saying that, because of Spaceman, we wish he never existed. The best scenario is that it this equipment ought to be included into macOS. Along with that, it would be great if we could select a rectangle and revert to a pre-set desktop, enabling the Linux system to function correctly. Apart from these two points, there is no real reason to complain: Man coming from someone or just someone – solving a problem and knowing how to be “well-off.”