Each screen has its own menu bar, while the dock is the same everywhere you go

Jun 27, 2013 07:37 GMT  ·  By

Multi-display support has been troublesome in OS X for the past two years, but Apple aims to fix all the glitches and bring some new stuff to the table while it’s at it.

In OS X Mavericks, multi-display support takes advantage of every monitor connected to your Mac, giving you more space to work, and less clutter to deal with.

Your primary display is any monitor you choose it to be. Each has its own menu bar, and the Dock is the same on every screen. This way you can have all your utilities at hand only where you need them, and all your important apps just a click away on every display.

Multiple app windows can run on either display, and you can run an app in full-screen mode (finally) on each one.

Alternately, Mavericks lets you show a desktop on one display and a full-screen app on another, and you can drag stuff around and even put any app window on a big HDTV across your room thanks to AirPlay integration.