


Stardock's Multiplicity is no longer available as a free version, and there are now three commercial versions to choose one. More than ten years later, a lot has changed. Stardock's solution was not the first program of its kind, there was Microsoft's Mouse without Borders, which users could use. a desktop PC and a laptop, with one mouse and keyboard connected to the main PC. Designed to give users control of multiple PCs with a single mouse and keyboard, it was an excellent tool to work on two machines, e.g. Back in 2012, Stardock released the initial version of its Multiplicity software for Windows.
