I'm trying to get 1 usb c cable out of our new 2016 MacBook to drive to external displays (not mirrored but extended). Ever dock I look at that has 2x outs says that the new MacBook can only mirror two displays. See except below. Has anyone been able to do this? I would appreciate any help you can give.
The Thunderbolt 3 ports in the MacBook Pro work with USB-C devices, which have the same connector shape. So if you want to use a USB-C device, you can just plug it into one of the Thunderbolt 3 ports.
Thanks so much! Rob CalDigit’s dock supports up to the 4096 x 2160 pixel resolution at 60Hz maximum on the MacBook Pro. But as noted above, it can’t drive two external monitors as distinct displays through its two ports. The company says that stems from a choice Apple made in implementing multi-stream transport (MST). MST differs from single-stream, in that it allows multiple distinct video desktops to pass over a single connection. This manifests itself both as monitors that combine two streams into a single display, and as adapters like this one that can split two desktop signals to appear on two separate displays. Its 2015 and later MacBook Pro models can handle an MST display, handling two displays is off the table for now.
CalDigit says a specific MST function called “MST hub” is not turned on in macOS, but believes Apple could enable it later. With Windows, the dock can drive two separate external displays on a capable Windows system. Yes, I am using two external displays (Dell U2410 and U2415) with the MacBook 2016.
Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter connected to USB-C port. HDMI to HDMI cable from adapter to U2415. USB cable from adapter to Diamond Multimedia Ultra Dock Dual Video USB 3.0/2.0 Universal Docking Station (DS3900V2) HDMI to HDMI cable from docking station to U2410. Wired keyboard and other USB peripherals connected to docking station. I installed the DisplayLink driver from. (Before doing this, the U2410 did not light up.) Also, note some issues with Sierra here:. (I was getting some flickering in the Safari title bar, but after clicking System Preferences - Accessibility - Display - Reduce transparency, the flickering went away.) Ken.
Agreed, this is massively disappointing and frustrating. The 'pro' in MacBook Pro seems to be becoming an ever diminishing distinction. Especially if this is, in fact, a software decision. There are tons of great and full-featured USB-C docks out there that support multiple display output - on Windows machines. Even on the MacBook running Boot Camp/Windows - so it's not even a hardware limitation. Someone decided to implement this specific functionality reduction in macOS, and it stinks.
For reference, I already own and can say for certain that it only supports dual monitors when they are mirrored, when connected to my brand new Touch Bar MBP 13'. Who exactly would ever want that? Yes, I am using two external displays (Dell U2410 and U2415) with the MacBook 2016.
Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter connected to USB-C port. HDMI to HDMI cable from adapter to U2415. USB cable from adapter to Diamond Multimedia Ultra Dock Dual Video USB 3.0/2.0 Universal Docking Station (DS3900V2) HDMI to HDMI cable from docking station to U2410. Wired keyboard and other USB peripherals connected to docking station. I installed the DisplayLink driver from. (Before doing this, the U2410 did not light up.) Also, note some issues with Sierra here:. (I was getting some flickering in the Safari title bar, but after clicking System Preferences - Accessibility - Display - Reduce transparency, the flickering went away.) Ken.
So if both of the monitors are plugged into the same usb-c port (one through the adapter, the other through the dock to the adapter) why couldn't you just use two of the ports on the dock? I already have two DVI monitors I'm trying to do this with, and a DVI to HDMI adapter, so couldn't I just use the HDMI and DVI ports on the dock and skip the adapter? Realizing I would need a USB to USB C cable to connect the dock to the computer directly.
Let me know if I'm missing something. Trying to solve this with the shortest daisy chain possible. Most people are talking about plugging into a dock that doesn't support DisplayLink technology. The dock that I mentioned in my post does, and so I plug directly into it with a converter cable, and out of that dock via DVI to two separate 1080p monitors. This is my in office set up for work.
I use dongles at home instead. One thing I will say is that DisplayLink has its quirks in the latest version of MacOS, this is on their site and they have confirmed it's due to Apple not coming to the table with them for the fix. Nev369 thank you for this solution it is working for me on a Macbook 2015. I get three monitors found the two Dells and the built-in one on the macbook showing in extended mode. But I can also switch to mirroring in 'preferences' 'display'.
Running 2 different dell 1080p monitors one to vga using a small dvi-to-vga adapter at the docking station and the other directly to the dvi connector on the docking station. Only one issue is that the Macbook does not seem to be getting power and is running off the battery. Do you use another adapter for this that will allow power to pass-thru?
Thanks again you rock! This is simple.
Use something cheap like this. Connect said dock to your new mac with a USB C to B cable. Download Display Link.
Connect two monitors to the USB Dock. Enjoy a single cable solution while extending (not just mirroring) to two separate displays - I have this same setup. The only problem I have is that it is impossible to find a DVI-D to DisplayPort cable. Unfortunately the two displays I'm trying to connect to only have VGA and DisplayPort inputs. For the life of me I can't find a DVI-D to DisplayPort convert.
It is as if everyone assumes you need to go FROM DisplayPort to DVI. Never the other way. I'm afraid for my use case, I'm going to have to get an active DVI-D to VGA converter to run my second display. ' CalDigit says a specific MST function called “MST hub” is not turned on in macOS, but believes Apple could enable it later. With Windows, the dock can drive two separate external displays on a capable Windows system.' I think the plot is a bit thicker because macOS WILL do MST when you use an Apple Cinema display.
And in fact, if you daisy chain multiple non-Apple displays together but hang a thunderbolt device somewhere in the chain it WILL daisy chain as well! As you say, the hardware works to daisy chain in Windows. Therefore I think macOS is checking to see if the connected display is an Apple Cinema display and/or legit thunderbolt device.
If the check fails, the port is downgraded to DP 1.2 and you can only mirror the display. This theory helps explain why this MST issue has been present since they introduced Thunderbolt 2.0 in 2013. The hardware MUST be DP 1.3 for Windows and Apple displays to work.
If you google you'll see people complaining about this issue ever since and perpetually hoping the latest OS will fix it. Bugs like this don't stick around for 4-5 years!
There is a business decision behind it and I reckon its to sell Apple displays. Apple Footer. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums. Apple disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the.
Ive been working with this issue for over a year (since I bought the MacBook Pro with USB-C) Certified apple technician have going through every possible related problem without any success. We have tried different cables, monitors, adapters (original och 3:d parts). Every single monitor besides apple Thunderbolt Displays are showing the flickering and monitor turning on/off.
' So far we assume that the MacBook Pro 13's internal graphic cards too weak to be able to give 2 monitors a stable good output.