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Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013
Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013







supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013
  1. #Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 how to#
  2. #Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 upgrade#
  3. #Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 software#
  4. #Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 professional#

OS X will automatically recognize the display, configure it for 3840 x 2160 at 60Hz and you’re good to go. All you need to do is ensure that DisplayPort 1.2 MST is enabled on the display itself (something that appears off by default) and plug it into the Mac Pro. The Sharp PN-K321 that Apple sells alongside the Mac Pro (as well as the ASUS clone of it) ships with 4K60 support configured out of the box. Apple handles this by maintaining some sort of a whitelist for various displays they’ve tested. MST topologies for single-display/4K60 support aren’t standardized unfortunately.

#Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 how to#

The GPU driver needs to know how to divide its frame buffer for output to the individual tiles, which can vary between monitors.

#Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 software#

The 4K/MST support requires a software component as well. I’m not sure if the Mac Pro’s GPU hardware can drive upcoming 4K single stream panels or not as AMD specifically lists that as a feature of the new Radeon R9 series. The first generation of 4K displays appear to be a bit of a hack. Note that it is possible to drive a 4K display at 60Hz using a single DisplayPort 1.2 stream, the limitation today appears to be entirely on the monitor side. By sending two tiles, each behaving like a 1920 x 2160 display (one half of 3840 x 2160), you can get around the bandwidth limitations of the current crop of display hardware. Originally conceived as a way of daisy chaining multiple displays together off of a single DP output, the current crop of 4K displays use MST to drive a single display.

supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013

To support 4K at 60Hz, you need to properly enable support for DisplayPort 1.2’s Multi-Stream Transport (MST) feature. Contrary to what Apple’s own support documentation lists, these 4K resolutions at limited refresh rates are supported via both HDMI and Thunderbolt 2/DisplayPort 1.2 on the new rMBPs. That’s acceptable for use as a video preview display, but extremely frustrating for anything else (try watching a mouse cursor animate at 30Hz). While the 2013 MacBook Pro with Retina Display can presently support outputting to either an 3840 x 2160 or 4096 x 2160 external panel, the maximum supported refresh rate is only 30Hz under OS X (and only 24Hz in the case of a 4096 x 2160 display).

supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013

Alternatively you can connect up to six 2560 x 1440 displays using the Thunderbolt 2 ports at the back of the machine. You can connect two 4K displays via Thunderbolt 2/DisplayPort, and the third 4K display over HDMI. I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from Apple 15" MacBook Pro Retina (2013) 2.7GHz Quad Core i7 - Used, Very Good condition.A huge part of the Mac Pro revolves around its support for 4K displays. When I decide my Mac Pro desktop needs upgrading I will look to OWC for the replacement. The half gig SSD is extremely fast making for a great laptop that I expect to fulfill my needs for some time. It's extremely fast and meets all of my needs. No scratches or other cosmetic blemishes.

#Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 upgrade#

I was able to upgrade to a quad core MBP for about half of what I was pricing in a new Mac from Apple. My old 2009 Mac Book Pro's dual processors were just not enough to handle some of today's demand.

#Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013 professional#

Verified Buyer Reviewer: BenzTV Location: Northwest GA Age: 55-65 Experience Level: IT Professional Owned Product: less than a month Rating: 5/5 Great price on an excellent laptop! DecemI do a lot of freelance video and graphic content creation. Intel, Intel Core, and Xeon are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and other countries.Īnd WebScript™ are a trademarks of Apple Inc. *While researched thoroughly via independent resources, OWC does not make any claim to accuracy or completeness of these specifications.Īnd Xserve® are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S.









Supported aspect ratio of macbook pro early 2013