2012 apple mac pro no hdmi
Supports both video and audio output." They don't sell a "HDMI to Thunderbolt 3" adapter.only one I see on their site is this third-party one which is very expensive and overkill). Here's one that simply says "Thunderbolt 3" but it's $90.00 (yikes!) When I search on Amazon for "thunderbolt 3 hdmi" the vast majority of the results say USB-C and "Thunderbolt 3 compatible". I think I'll wait to try the Anker adapter that I ordered before spending even more money on this. I'll let you guys know (should arrive Tuesday). If it doesn't work, I think I'll call Apple support before spending nearly $100 on another adapter - will also let you guys know what they say if it comes to that.Except it’s not semantic, as Active and Passive DisplayPort adapters literally have defined meanings in the DP standard and literally have completely different meanings to the irrelevant one you’re applying. Passive adapters request the specific signal from the GPU. Active adapters convert a DisplayPort signal inside the adapter. This doesn’t matter so much for VGA as there aren’t active adapters, or if there are, they’re very rare, but this matters MASSIVELY in the real world for HDMI. Most GPUs (or at least when MiniDP was relevant) could only create 2 HDMI signals but 6 DisplayPort ones.
#2012 apple mac pro no hdmi pro#
In the case of the Mac Pro or MBP to get more than 2 HDMI outputs you needed active adapters - passive ones wouldn’t work. So again, it’s not semantic as the difference you regard here (IC vs no IC) isn’t actually a relevant difference to what’s actually being discussed here at all. Passive/active isn’t remotely “IC vs no IC” (and literally never is) it refers to where the signal is generated and where the conversion takes place.