"I just did."
But something strange happened over the next week. People started using vertical monitors. Someone wrote a AutoHotkey script to fake a side taskbar with a floating widget. Derek the product manager submitted a formal request to revise the IT policy, citing "developer morale and ergonomic diversity." move taskbar
By Friday, the office had fractured. The "Bottoms" (traditionalists) argued that the taskbar belonged exactly where Microsoft had placed it in 1995. The "Tops" claimed it improved vertical screen real estate for widescreens. The "Lefties" (Elena's people) praised its efficiency for ultrawide monitors. And three "Righties" sat in the corner, insisting that right-alignment was the true path to enlightenment, though no one believed they actually existed. "I just did
For a little while, anyway.
Her coworker, Leo, walked by her desk (he was one of those people who still walked to desks instead of just pinging). He froze. Derek the product manager submitted a formal request
The taskbar snapped to the left side of the screen like it had been waiting for this moment its whole life.
The bullpen erupted.