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No luck connectiong two external monitors to my Macbook Pro

Hi!


I recently purchased a Macbook Pro 13" with the M1 chip. I'd like to connect (2) external monitors, so when using my laptop, I have a total of 3 screens.


However, I've bought a ton of cords, adapters, docking stations and none of them seem to work no matter what I do.


I'll link everything I have, any help is appreciated!



https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LYS3Q5A/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1


https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07ZZ7Q1GX/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1


https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08B3LHQL3/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1


I also have the USB-C to Digital AV adapter from apple.


I've tried connecting with HDMIs, VGA, UBC-C and combinations of all those, still no luck.


Help? please :)

MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 11.0

Posted on Feb 14, 2021 6:39 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Feb 14, 2021 7:12 PM

Rebekahd7165 wrote:

Well, that's helpful! I feel silly. Is there any way, 3rd party connectors will allow it?


The specs are correct, if that’s what you’re asking.


M1 integrated graphics can drive a total of two displays, based on the announced Macs. One internal and one external on the laptops, two external on the mini.


Or alternatively, would I need a different Macbook, which one?


Check the tech specs. Here’s the MacBook Pro 16” 2019, with support for up to four external displays.

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7 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Feb 14, 2021 7:12 PM in response to Rebekahd7165

Rebekahd7165 wrote:

Well, that's helpful! I feel silly. Is there any way, 3rd party connectors will allow it?


The specs are correct, if that’s what you’re asking.


M1 integrated graphics can drive a total of two displays, based on the announced Macs. One internal and one external on the laptops, two external on the mini.


Or alternatively, would I need a different Macbook, which one?


Check the tech specs. Here’s the MacBook Pro 16” 2019, with support for up to four external displays.

Feb 14, 2021 6:42 PM in response to Rebekahd7165

MacBook Pro 13” M1 2020 supports one external monitor, not two.


Simultaneously supports full native resolution on the built-in display at millions of colors and:

  • One external display with up to 6K resolution at 60Hz

Thunderbolt 3 digital video output

  • Native DisplayPort output over USB-C
  • VGA, HDMI, DVI, and Thunderbolt 2 output supported using adapters (sold separately)


Feb 15, 2021 7:45 AM in response to Rebekahd7165

DisplayLink technology creates a "fake" display buffer in RAM, sends the data out over a slower interface to a stunt box with DisplayLink custom chips that put that data back onto a "legacy" interface. It is not a true "accelerated" display, and it suffers from lagging.


It may be acceptable for a second display showing slow-to-change data such as computer program listings, stock quotes, or spreadsheets, but NOT for full motion Video, not for Video editing, and absolutely not for gaming. Mouse-tracking on that display can lag, and can make you feel queasy.


In a pinch, it may even play Internet videos without (as one user put it) "too many dropped frames".


This is in stark contrast to the Apple standard for its built-in hardware-accelerated displays, which are suitable for production/display of cinema-quality video with NO dropped frames, and NO dropouts or partial-blank scan lines due to memory under-runs or other issues.


--------

It is really nice to know that you can use a DisplayLink display if you MUST have an additional display for some of the types of data I mentioned. But that is NOT the same as the computer supporting a second, built-in, Hardware-accelerated display.


These displays depend on DisplayLink software, and are at the whim of Apple when they make MacOS changes. There have been cases where MacOS changes completely Borked DisplayLink software, and it took some time for them to recover.


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I think the Big Surprise for a lot of Hub/Dock buyers is that they thought they were getting a "real" display, but actually got a DisplayLink "fake" Display. If you got what you expected in every case, I would not use such pejorative terms to describe DisplayLink.

No luck connectiong two external monitors to my Macbook Pro

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