The docking station and monitor were working fine with Vista. Dell Support says it's not a hardware issue. Any ideas? This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. I have the same question Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. Shinmila H. Hey rlm18, Please perform these checks to pin down the root cause of the problem. If you drag the mouse pointer to a position that is not inside the WinDbg frame or any other dock and then you release the mouse button, the dragged window remains floating.
All of the preceding rules apply to the mouse pointer location itself. They do not depend on where you originally selected within the title bar of the window that you are dragging.
If you let WinDbg automatically dock a floating window that was previously docked, WinDbg tries to put the window in the same docking position that it previously occupied. Also, if you load a workspace, WinDbg tries to restore all of the debugging information windows to their previous positions, whether docked or floating.
However, multiple instances of Memory windows and Source windows are not distinguished when the docking position is saved.
For example, if you combine the Locals window together with a Memory window in a tabbed collection, and this state is saved and later restored, the Locals window joins a Memory window in a tabbed collection, but it might not be the same Memory window as before. If you load a workspace that includes one or more Source windows when the source files are inaccessible, those Source windows are not reopened. When this situation occurs, other windows that were tabbed together with those windows might return to the floating state.
If you want to keep all of your Source windows tabbed together, you should include at least one source file that is always present, or include an additional window in the tabbed collection.
Skip to main content. This browser is no longer supported. But if you're looking for an easy way to extend the functionality of your desktop and give it a little pizzazz at the same time, one of these docks should suit your needs perfectly. They are all incredibly simple to use, consume very little resources, and are stable enough for production-use machines. App of the Week Newsletter Don't waste another second searching for IT and business apps--we've got you covered.
Our featured App of the Week might boost your productivity, secure your email, track career goals, and more. Delivered Thursdays. He's covered a variety of topics for over twenty years and is an avid promoter of open source. For more news about Jack Wallen, visit his website jackwallen With a free and a paid version, ObjectDock automatically imports quick launch, has special effects, offers applets, any-edge positioning, and auto-hide, lets you minimize windows to dock with live animation, and much more.
With XWindows Dock you just drag any icon from the desktop onto the dock and voila! This dock is still in beta, so features like plug-ins aren't exactly there yet although they have the groundwork for them. XWindows Dock does contain two nice plug-ins -- the stack container quick navigation through folders and a Gmail mail checker.
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