• @[email protected]
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    394 days ago

    At work both my monitors and networking go through the same port. The monitor also acts as a usb hub.

    You can buy an adapter and plug everything in one port.

    I love it personally.

    • Dariusmiles2123
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      54 days ago

      I only have one Usb-c port on my Surface Go 1, but it’s linked to my screen with 4 usb-A ports and one more Usb-c port.

      Same as you, I feel I have enough, at least when it’s hooked up to the screen.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      You can only do that because your monitors are not high resolution and high refresh rate. The data cap for usb-c is not that high.

      • @ccunning
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        214 days ago

        USB-C is just a connector, but Thunderbolt 5 uses it and for asymmetric uses (e.g. a monitor) it can hit 120Gbps.

        Isn’t that going to support most monitors?

        • @[email protected]
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          4 days ago

          Please, list the devices that you know have tb5.

          Also, that’s the total bandwidth in a best case scenario. You’re not factoring in that you’ll need to share that with all of the devices in a hub. That’s without mentioning that you need the hub (which also has a cost).

          • @[email protected]
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            114 days ago

            The USB4 protocol can handle 160Gb/s split asymettrically (so, say, 120Gb/s out, 40Gb/s in), wheras the upper limit for DisplayPort’s highest bandwidth mode, Quad UHBR 20, is 80Gb/s in one direction. So you can saturate your DisplayPort 2.0 quad-channel with more than enough bandwidth to power three 10K 60Hz 30-bit (i.e. very high-end) monitors in DSC mode, and still only be using half the bandwidth of USB4, all using a single cable which I can also use to charge my earphones.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 days ago

              Most devices only have 40gbps USB4. Which is still enough for almost all sane use cases. Frankly, if you need multiple 4K monitors get a desktop.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 days ago

                Uhm no? There are more than a few use cases that require a mobile set up for demos for example but that you’d also want to use in a desk setting. For example, architects or sw dev.

                Which is still enough for almost all sane use cases.

                Like 2 4k60 monitors and literally nothing else? You have a very conservative opinion of what a “sane” use case is. Not to mention that lots of USB-C cable certification is a mess so not even getting the cable is simple (or cheap).

                • @[email protected]
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                  14 days ago

                  Show me one architect that is actually dragging along two external 4k displays with their laptop.

                  If you are a professional with specific needs buy a specific laptop. Frankly there are more than enough laptops that have more ports if that’s what you need. Except even in your example you don’t even need more ports because you can just use the second USB4 port.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    04 days ago

                    You misunderstood. They use those monitors when actually working in a stationary place with their desktop setup. However, it’s very common to then have to go to your client’s office to show them said work or discuss future steps. At which point having multiple port options comes in handy if you have to plug in to a tv, monitor or projector.

                    You can’t seriously consider asking for hdmi and displayport on a laptop a “specific need”.

            • @[email protected]
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              -24 days ago

              K then buddy. Keep buying dongles for your dongles.

              My point is that including the ports is extremely simple. I’m not telling you that it’s wrong to choose to use a dock because you find it more convenient. I’m just saying that you could have the option instead of that being the only option you have. There’s no technical reason to not include the actual physical separate ports.

              Also, monitors and your earbuds? That’s a very low bar. Lots of different tasks would require far more than that. Devices should be flexible.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 days ago

                Devices should be flexible.

                Agreed. It’s a pity, then, that no-one has invented a single port that can replace USB-A, DisplayPort, HDMI, propriatary power connectors, Thunderb… oh… wait…

                • @[email protected]
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                  -14 days ago

                  Yeah, show me a laptop that has 10 of those. Plus, your conveniently ignoring the plethora of adapters you’d have to use if all you had were USB-C ports.

          • @Bassman1805
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            14 days ago

            Every enterprise laptop I’ve seen in the last 5 years?

          • @disguy_ovahea
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            04 days ago

            All high quality peripheral docks support Thunderbolt. Thunderbolt 5 docks began to release last month. You can connect the devices to the dock using USB-C, then just use one Thunderbolt cable to connect the dock to your Mac to prevent a bottleneck.

            • @[email protected]
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              -34 days ago

              So, barely a handful? Great. How much do they cost? And how much does it cost to just use the cable your devices come with?

              • @disguy_ovahea
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                4 days ago

                The countless remaining docks support Thunderbolt 4, which at 40 Gb/s is still twice as fast as USB-C 3.2 Gen 2x2.

                They range from $49-$299, depending on the features and number of ports needed. If you’re using the native HDMI port on your MacBook Pro, it’ll be on the low end of the price range.

                The only cable that comes with a MacBook Pro is a USB-C charging cable.

                • @[email protected]
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                  04 days ago

                  The countless remaining docks support Thunderbolt 4, which at 40 Gb/s is still twice as fast as USB-C 3.2 Gen 2x2.

                  Awesome. But what I think is ideal is having multiple ports which, in addition, would give you more bandwith, more reliability and more flexibility than a single high bandwidth hub.

                  The only cable that comes with a MacBook Pro is a USB-C charging cable.

                  You misread. I was referring to the cables the devices you use with your laptop come with.

                  • @disguy_ovahea
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                    4 days ago

                    MacBook Pro comes with three Thunderbolt 5/USB-C ports (120 Gb/s), HDMI 2.1b, MagSafe 3, and a 3.5 mm headphone jack. Trading a USB-C port for USB-A means potentially downgrading a USB-C capable device to USB-A with an adapter. The opposite results in better performance, and the adapters will continue to be useful as long as you own USB-A devices. When computers only have USB-C ports, your other adapters will be useless.

                    As for cables, I replace them rather than using adapters. Monoprice.com sells quality cables relatively inexpensively.

      • @GamingChairModel
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        54 days ago

        Can you break this down?

        The 2017 model pictured in this post supported Thunderbolt 3, which was a 40 gbps connection. Supported display modes included up to 4k@120, 2x4k@60, or 5k@60, which was better than the then-standard HDMI 2.0.

        What combination of resolution, frame rate, and color depth are you envisioning that having a dock handle a gigabit Ethernet connection, analog audio would require scaling down the display resolution through the same port?

        By 2021, the MacBook Pros were supporting TB4, and the spec sheets on third party docking stations were supporting 8k resolutions, even if Macs themselves only supported 6k, or up to 4x4k.

        Even if we talk about DisplayPort Alt Mode, a VESA standard developed in 2014, and supported in the 2017 models pictured in this post, that’s just a standard DP connection, which in 2017 supported HDR 5k@60. But didn’t support a whole separate dock with networking and USB ports.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 days ago

          Supported display modes included up to 4k@120, 2x4k@60, or 5k@60

          Right, for a single device.

          What combination of resolution, frame rate, and color depth are you envisioning that having a dock handle a gigabit Ethernet connection, analog audio would require scaling down the display resolution through the same port?

          Dual 4k120 would already saturate the bandwith. Regarding networking, gigabit is pretty slow for LAN depending on your workload. If you were to require 10gbit, you’d be SOL.

          By 2021, the MacBook Pros were supporting TB4, and the spec sheets on third party docking stations were supporting 8k resolutions, even if Macs themselves only supported 6k, or up to 4x4k.

          Did you read the specs in your link? Even with that TB4 dock you wouldn’t be able to do dual 4k120.

          I really don’t get trying to justify manufacturers forcing you to buy an additional device to get the same ports they could provide natively without using a hub/dock. It’s a pretty submissive attitude.

          • @GamingChairModel
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            14 days ago

            Dual 4k120 would already saturate the bandwith.

            What would you use to drive dual 4k/120 displays over a single cable, if not Thunderbolt over USB-C? And what 2017 laptops were capable of doing that?

            Even if we’re talking about two different cables over two different ports, that’s still a pretty unusual use case that not a lot of laptops would’ve been capable of in 2017.

            • @[email protected]
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              04 days ago

              4k120 panels weren’t even available in 2017 afaik. But you could do dual 4k120 with one hdmi 2.1 and 1 displayport 1.4 so just need 2 video outputs from your laptop (which used to be pretty common).

              Please note that we’re having this discussion in 2024 and I’m talkimg about use cases in 2024. I don’t really see the point in talking about what you would theoretically do 6 years ago with panels that weren’t even available.