Yes, this is a very required feature.
When working with (or presenting to) external displays, it is necessary to:
- see time
- have access to calendar
- Some apps are missing top bars.

Very appreciated.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1682542

Title:
  Add support for top bars on all monitors to allow for multi-monitor
  support in primary extensions - apps-menu, places-menu, topbar, etc

Status in GNOME Shell:
  New
Status in gnome-shell package in Ubuntu:
  Triaged

Bug description:
  This issue will effectively be a regression in desktop usage once
  Ubuntu switches from Unity to Gnome Shell. Gnome Shell does not work
  well with multiple monitors unlike every other desktop environment
  except Budgie, which is switching away from GTK/Gnome to Qt with
  Budgie 11 due out in the next month or two.

  I reported it upstream last month but it does not appear to have much
  traction at the moment.

  https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780078

  "
  It would be nice if the primary included gnome-shell extensions, eg apps-menu 
and places-menu (and by extension the topbar) supported multi-monitor similar 
to how the bottom bar 'window-list' currently does. This was easy to achieve on 
Gnome 2 and now via MATE (out of the box) but there does not appear to be any 
way to do this with Gnome 3. This also leads to there not being a way to do 
this via 'Gnome Classic'. Even Windows finally (in W10) does this better out of 
the box than Gnome 3.

  BTW - Intel has supported IGP triple head since Ivy Bridge (2012) so
  it is very cheap to deploy a triple head system (~ $200 for 3 1080p
  monitors). AMD supports up to quad head in their IGPs.

  This has been blocking me from moving to Gnome 3 since its release and I 
finally decided to write a bug report about it. I have had all multi-monitor 
systems since prior to 2004.
  "

  And see comments #11 and #14 from Florian.

  "
  No, you don't want that in the extensions. Each extension is separate, so 
what you are asking for here is that apps-menu and places-menu *both* add top 
bars to non-primary monitors. We are definitely not going to add two or more 
stacked panels at the top.

  What you probably want instead is an option in gnome-shell to put top bars on 
non-primary monitors, and the aforementioned extensions to handle that case.
  "

  "
  Well, we've established what you want, but that doesn't necessarily mean that 
we'll implement it.

  So far the reasoning seems to be:
   - you really want the feature
   - GNOME 2 / Windows has it

  Unlike the case of the window list, nothing in the top bar (except for
  the app menu to some extent) is tied to a particular monitor, so
  there's a much weaker case here IMHO.

  (I'll also note that this wouldn't be a "cheap" option, but require work on 
lots of details throughout the stack - we'd need to figure out the overview 
(only include the activities button on the primary monitor? or allow an 
overview on any monitor?), get API to control the brightness of a particular 
monitor (rather than the built-in one), don't use "the monitor with the top 
bar" as indicator for the primary monitor in Settings, ...)
  "

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