LumoTray
Wallpapers
Windows users managing multiple monitor setups have long contended with clumsy workarounds for coordinating wallpapers, lockscreen backgrounds, and screensaver modes across displays. LumoTray directly addresses this friction by bundling wallpaper management, lockscreen customization, screensaver modes, and a custom menu builder into a single utility.
The breadth of features for a solo developer project is substantial. The wallpaper manager supports live and animated wallpapers, video playlists, solid colors with gradients, and rotating feeds from Unsplash, Wallhaven, NASA, Windows Spotlight, and museum art collections. The lockscreen manager offers the same customization options, letting users maintain visual consistency across login screens. Screensaver and fullscreen modes add functional displays including clocks, alarms, timers, and Shadertoy visualizations.
The custom menu builder adds productivity value beyond aesthetics. Users construct multi-level menu structures with virtually unlimited shortcuts to files, applications, scripts, and documents—all accessible from the tray icon. The hot corners feature, new in version 2, enables actions triggered by moving the cursor to screen edges, functionality Windows itself lacks.
What distinguishes LumoTray is its handling of multi-monitor configurations that Windows doesn't natively support. The ability to set different wallpapers per monitor and manage non-standard setups addresses a genuine limitation in the operating system's capabilities.
The business model keeps overhead minimal. The software is free to download with all features fully functional and no imposed limitations. A $19 one-time license is entirely optional, available for users who find substantial value or use the tool in business contexts. This avoids subscription mechanics while fairly compensating the developer's ongoing work.
Consistent updates reinforce active development. The project releases new features every couple months; version 2 introduced live wallpapers and additional content sources, and version 2.2 added museum art and NASA EPIC collections. This pace suggests the developer genuinely engages with feature requests rather than treating the project as maintenance-only.