I got myself a Mac for learning SwiftUi because I want to make an iPhone game. I got myself a used 16/256 M1 Air model that has 2 USB-C ports and that’s it.

This made me create a workstation, where I have a high quality Thunderbolt 3 dock that works with DisplayLink, so I can have up to 4 external displays on windows and 3 on my MacBook Air. On this dock, I have connected 2 monitors, a mouse, a keyboard, a webcam, still have some USB A and C ports free to use. Best thing is that this dock has a micro SD and a regular SD slot!

All this through a single USB-C cable!

I want to connect my work HP Probook to this setup? Just plug the USB-C cable in and all comes to life!

I want to connect my gaming-PC? Just plug the USB-C cable in the Thunderbolt slot of the Graphics card and all comes to life!

Oh, I want to connect my USB-C emulator console, iPad, Tablet, etc. to the monitor, or the USB-stick? Or the Ethernet ? Just plug it in!

Basically I got my single cable workstation, and all that because of Apple removing useful at-home-things from a on-the-go device

  • Boozilla
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    82 hours ago

    Upvote for unpopular. But I really don’t understand this mentality that removing options “for you” is a good thing.

  • Admiral PatrickM
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    2 hours ago

    I can do all that with my X1 Carbon which isn’t much thicker than an M1 Air. It’s got the same two USB-C / Thunderbolt ports but also has full-size HDMI, 2xUSB A, and wired headphones.

    It seems like Apple’s main method of innovation is finding new ways to get people to buy $29.99 dongles over and over again.

    They like to make things appear sleek until you actually have to use them. All that sleekness goes out the window as soon as someone hands you flash drive and you have to break out a dock.

  • @[email protected]
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    42 hours ago

    I like my Framework 16’s solution: 6 hot-swappable expansion ports. Only want one USB-C? Get one and 3d print fillers for the other 5 slots or use the expandable memory because why not (other than $). Want an SD or MicroSD? You can get that too, along with 3.5mm, hdmi, USB-A, ethernet, or display ports. Everyone can configure it exactly how they want.

  • @foggy
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    103 hours ago

    Yeah until a peripheral is having weird issues that magically goes away only when you plug in directly to the computer.

    • @Jesus_666
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      72 hours ago

      Or the dock randomly decides it doesn’t like one specific computer anymore and falls back to being a USB3 hub. Thunderbolt docks are really cool but I’ve had tons of reliability issues with them over the years.

      I still use one but it’s been relieved from display duty because it didn’t always play nice.

  • @Xeroxchasechase
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    93 hours ago

    Sorry to say that, but making the usb a universal serial bus is not an Apple concept. With the C specs, it’s mature enough to be used at any of these instances, even on those wall-e inpired inferior machines. Apple innovation is that for people who still want to use hdmi, headphones, ethernet or other connector they say fuck you 🖕🍎🖕

  • Skull giver
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    63 hours ago

    I have a laptop with both USB C and USB a and HDMI. The SD card slot is only full SD, unfortunately, but I did add a terabyte M.2 slot to the inside because it only came with 512GB, so it’s not like I’m lacking any space.

    These ports are very useful when I don’t carry my dock with me. Also very useful for connecting multiple screens, as USB-C doesn’t have that much bandwidth.

    Though, from what I can tell the MacBook M1 models don’t have the hardware capabilities to run multiple screens without falling back to hacks like DisplayLink that will eat up your CPU like crazy, so I suppose the screen issue probably won’t affect you too much; Apple had some weird design restrictions in their earlier M series chips that means you can’t get multiple DisplayPort streams out.

    Docks are neat, and there’s a reason they’ve been in use by businesses since the 90s, but you can have docks and ports on the laptop itself.