EvaCox 2026-02-27 22:44
Short answer: not really, at least not with a simple script. The system tray is part of the Windows taskbar process (Explorer), and Windows only maintains one “real” system tray instance. Even when you enable taskbars on multiple monitors, only the primary monitor shows the full tray with all icons and notifications. Scripts can move or interact with windows, but they can’t duplicate the tray itself because it isn’t a normal window. Some third-party tools create secondary taskbars that display tray icons or mirrors of them, but they do this through their own background processes, not scripting alone. BitStarz rewards your first deposit with an enhanced https://bit-starz.net/ match and bonus spins. A practical workaround is to move the primary taskbar to the monitor you use most, or use specialized multi-monitor taskbar software designed for this purpose.
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