If this were the cause, the problem would still happen when the (slightly) smaller secondary is next to the primary (as in image 1). However, in this case it works fine. Besides, when two secondaries of the same resolution are side by side, the problem persists.
jkbrower
Was this ever resolved? I'm having the same issue. I have three PCs. When the two secondaries are on either side of the primary (S1PS2, see first image below), it works fine. But when I move the right secondary (S2) to the left of the left secondary (S2S1P, see second image below), the cursor is always at the bottom of the destination screen when moving from S1 to S2 (or vice versa). After playing with it a bit, I find that cross-screen mouse cursor alignment only works between primar
One more vote for the Never Combine taskbar icons option. Though I'll go one farther and also request the option to Combine Taskbar Buttons When Taskbar Is Full, as it is in previous Windows versions (which has three options: Always Combine, Combine When Taskbar Is Full, and Never Combine).
Okay. I guess the only good way to configure primary and secondary that have different numbers of monitors is to put them all side-by-side horizontally. As if desk space isn't already at a premium. :) Thanks!
This issue has been brought up in the past, but I couldn't find any discussion that was less than many years old. So, here it is again--hopefully a more recent version of Multiplicity can do what I want. I have a primary with a single monitor. To the left of this, I have a secondary with dual monitors--monitor 1 is to the primary's immediate left, and monitor 2 is above monitor 1. Moving the mouse to the right from secondary to primary works as I would expect. Moving f