
It does not save multiple screen position. So even if you carefully get the window to take up half your screen just how you want it and then hit F11 Twice like stated it will save that as the default position and then do the behavior that I said after that. You would have to have a Explorer window open for the "left side" folder and a Explorer window open for the "right side".Īs it has been stated Windows will only save the first position. Also yes it is 2 different instances if you wish to see both folders at once. Because Windows does not know if you are opening multiple instances of Explorer.

Your best option is going to be submitting feedback at this time. This is behavior that is seen even in Linux. So that when the first window opens again it doesnt take up the left or right side of the screen. The main reason this behavior doesnt stay is because they are cascaded or tiled or how ever you want to say it. But i dont see how it is really that much more difficult to hit Win Key+ Left Arrow and Win Key + Right arrow. Open the 2nd folder "right side" and move it so it's on the right side of the screen - NOT OVERLAPPING OR TOUCHING THE FIRST FOLDER AT ALL!

Open the 1st folder "left side" and move/size it so it's on the left side of the screen. Make another new folder called "right side". Right click on the desktop and choose New folder. If my video camera wasn't broken I would make a video, but try this. I don't think that's a radical concept - having 2 windows open and wanting to see the contents of them both at the same time instead of piling them up on top of each other. How is that useful, exactly? I have to manually drag & move them around (again) to see both at the same time, which is all I want to do in the first place.

Instead it PILES THEM UP ON TOP OF EACH OTHER.

Windows doesn't "save" the positions of them after I carefully arrange them how I want (which is side by side, NOT "exactly in the same position"). No I'm not talking about 2 instances of the same window (folder) I'm talking about opening two DIFFERENT folders.
