The 16:9 aspect ratio is a video format. It is not a research format. The reality of daily knowledge work is entirely vertical: document scrolling, code review, terminal output, dataset inspection. Every pixel of static operating system chrome is a pixel subtracted from the active working surface.
The default Windows 11 taskbar offers no native reduction mechanism short of complete auto-hide, which introduces its own latency cost. After evaluating desktop environments across the consortium using a cost-benefit framework, we determined that a single unified configuration does not serve our diverse user base. We are standardizing on two distinct configuration stacks, both powered by the open-source customization engine Windhawk.
The two stacks are divided by role and workflow priority. The Standard Stack restores familiar proportions and improves basic window management. The Advanced Stack maximizes vertical real estate and eliminates animation overhead for technical users.
This profile is designed for users whose primary work involves literature review, documentation, and scheduling. The goal is to restore familiar legacy proportions and reduce interface friction for new team members.
Included modifications:
Support overhead: Low. The layout closely mimics previous operating systems, minimizing onboarding friction. Cumulative quality-of-life improvements without introducing unfamiliar interface patterns.
This profile is built for users running IDEs, terminal windows, and multi-repository monitoring sessions. The priority is maximizing vertical space and eliminating menu navigation latency.
Included modifications:
Support overhead: Slightly higher than the Standard Stack. The trade-off is a measurable increase in visible vertical data and a reduction in context-switching latency for complex system architecture review.
The consortium operates without a centralized endpoint management system. Deployment is self-serve. Two paths are available: a JSON import for most users, and a manual build for those who prefer to review individual components before installation.
This is the recommended path. Both stacks have been exported as standardized configuration files that enforce strict sizing rules.
A note on why the JSON profiles are necessary: Windows 11 recently introduced a native toggle for “smaller taskbar buttons” that shrinks icons while leaving them floating in an oversized bar. The JSON profiles override this behavior, locking taskbar height and icon size so they remain correctly aligned regardless of native Windows settings.
Standard_Stack_Profile.json — [link pending: consortium server]Advanced_Stack_Profile.json — [link pending: consortium server]Windhawk will automatically download the required modifications and apply the correct pixel parameters.
For researchers who prefer to review individual tools before installation.
Step 1 — Core application: Install the base Windhawk application from windhawk.net.
Step 2 — Base modification (both stacks): Install the Taskbar height and icon size modification. Apply these exact parameters to prevent scaling conflicts:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Taskbar height | 34 |
| Icon size | 16 |
| Taskbar button width | 28 |
Apply the same values to the “Small icon” fields as well.
Step 3 — Advanced Stack additions (skip if using the Standard Stack):
If you identify additional modifications that improve your specific research workflow, document them and share your findings with the architecture group for potential inclusion in future profile updates.