The problem is that there are two (as I see it) external monitor work
flows we need to consider.

These use cases are designed from a mix of intuition, personal use,
physical observations of dual monitor users over the years, and from
reading discussions related to dual monitor behavior in various
applications.

1, A Desktop with two matching monitors: Users here use their monitors
as one massive workspace. They do not really think of it as two
monitors; that is just an implementation detail. They have everything
laid out in front of them, and while they may generally separate their
work by monitor, they still float things back and forth often and are
usually aware of the entire space.

2. A laptop with an external monitor: Users of this configuration tend
to use their secondary monitor as storage space. It's an edge of the
desk for putting reference material, and other non-focused items.
Gwibber idling to display new tweets, API documentation, reference
material. The primary screen is the work area. It's in front of they
keyboard* so while typing their attention is focused in that direction.
It feels much less natural to have your head turned and be working in a
different direction than your hands are pointing

So we need to design the multimonitor case with that in mind. The two
means of working are rather different. The current behavior is very sub-
optimal for the second case, of the laptop with an external. I feel that
we can devise a very transparent dynamic system for this.

My proposal:
Have two configurations for how the panels get laid out, and menus behave. We 
can fairly reliably detect which case we should use. Xrandr gives a wealth of 
display information. If we see LVDS, we have a laptop. If we get a hotplug 
event, assume laptop case. Desktops don't get monitors plugged in and out of 
them very often. They tend to be static. We can probably even do some guessing 
based on screen geometries. I haven't seen too many dual monitor desktop users 
with differently sized screens. The super large desktop metaphor kind of breaks 
down here. This might be another hint we could use to decide.

Unfortunately I don't think that this is a problem where a one-size-
fits-all solution will work, but luckily it's one where it should be
relatively easy to make it just do what's implicitly expected.

*Some users also use a usb keyboard. I haven't seen very much of this so
I can't really comment on how they use multiple monitors. I would guess
that they would be a use case closer to 1 than 2, but I can't say.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/683084

Title:
  Global menu doesn't work well with more than one screen

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