![]() So I'd probably lean towards more/faster cores, maxing out the RAM (can install it myself), and bumping up the size of the SSD, rather than splurging on an upgraded video card. I'm thinking the upgraded video cards would be "nice to have" but not critical, with better performance for games/videos, but for what I do (very limited video editing, no watching movies, no gaming, but lots of photo editing) the benefits of the video card upgrades would be limited (true?) and my extra spend would be best applied elsewhere (RAM, storage). I assume that any of the video cards currently offered for the 27" iMac would work adequately. I had heard of the LG (it does seem to be discontinued, sadly.as noted, still available if you look hard enough in the right places) but was thrown off by the apparent resolution. And I appreciate the correction on the resolution. So, it seems that if I want two displays for my 27" iMac, and I want them to both have the same display resolution (so there's no huge difference in appearance between content on one versus the other, like when dragging a document or open Finder window from one display to the other), then the only way to have that is to buy TWO more monitors (that match each other) and then not use use built-in display?! I find it hard to believe that I am the first person who wants a second screen for their 27" iMac (and want the display to more or less match the internal one). I don't have a dead or otherwise unused 27" iMac sitting around and available for use as a screen so that's not exactly practical. It seems some folks are using a (scrapped?) 27" iMac as a second display on their 27" iMac. The built-in iMac 27" screen appears to be the only 5K, 6016x3384 display. No separately-sold monitors claiming to be "5K" (oodles of 4K screens, some 8K), none boasting native resolutions of 6016x3384. Please correct me if I have jumped to an incorrect conclusion.Īpple markets the iMac display as a "5K" display, with a resolution of 6016x3384.Īs best I can tell, there are no other 27" monitors that exist in the world that have a native display of 6016x3384. And I'm concluding that.Apple has made this all but impossible. ![]() I will get my laptop in early December (trading in 27" 5K iMac) So, if I get a display that has a USB-C (not a Thunderbolt) port than what are the specs of computer displays that I could daisy chain? If I cannot daisy chain two 4K monitors than what are the other work-arounds? I know I could use 2 of the three T4/USB-4 laptop ports? Could you hook up two monitors with a dock? Thunderbolt displays don't appear to have good coverage of the Adobe RGB space at present. It turns out that currently these monitors in a somewhat affordable range have a USB-C connection at best. I am also looking for a display that supports a photography workflow (hobbyist) so I am looking for one that covers the Adobe RGB space. I am looking for one external display now and want to future proof my selection in case I want to get a 2nd display in the future. I assume there's no additional display adapter or other potential complications needed (just power and theThunderbolt/USB C cable) - correct?īottom line: I'm looking to have both displays (the internal and an external) match, to the extent that's possible.Ĭan anyone suggest good options for a second monitor that would work well with this 27" iMac in a side-by-side configuration? Thanks.Ĭan you daisy chain two 4K monitors with USB-C ports to a 14" MacBook Pro, M1 Chip computer? I have ordered the new 14" MacBook Pro with the M1 Pro chip. If I'm reading the specs correctly, to connect a second monitor, all I would need would be 1) to use one of the included Thunderbolt 3 DV ports (it has two), and the second display itself - the included video card (any of them, actually) should support the internal display plus a second at up to 6K with 1 bazillion colors. I can live with bezels, but other than that would like the two displays to appear as "seamless" as possible for use as an extended desktop. My goal would be a second display that matches the resolution, color and (as close as possible) the size of the built-in display. I'm considering the new (2020) 27" iMac with Retina 5K display and have some questions about hooking up a second display. ![]()
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