

- #4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 HOW TO#
- #4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 MAC OS X#
- #4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 UPGRADE#
- #4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 PC#
- #4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 PLUS#
Here’s how to enable full resolution over the Thunderbolt/Mini DisplayPort 1.2 connectors on the Retina MacBook Pro, and presumably other early Macs: The Dell P2715Q, however, has MST turned off by default. But it is possible to do it using Multi-Stream Transport (MST), which combines two DisplayPort signals on one screen. The 2012 rMBP supports DisplayPort 1.2, which apparently can’t do UltraHD resolution on a Mac. If you’d rather use DisplayPort, it is possible but requires a tweak to the monitor. The center Scaled resolution looks best to me on this big Dell monitor I recommend the center item, “looks like 2560 x 1440” as a nice compromise. Go into System Preferences, select Display, and then Scaled. HDMI works pretty well out of the box, but you’ll want to manually set the display resolution to something better than 1920×1080 on a large panel like this. And it’ll be even better once I’ve got a machine capable of driving it at 60 Hz! Pairing a Dell P2715Q Monitor With an Older MacĪs I mentioned above, there are a few gotchas when connecting the Dell P2715Q to an older Mac like my 2012 MacBook Pro with Retina Display.
#4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 PLUS#
#4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 PC#
So Mac owners are looking at PC hardware makers like Samsung, Acer, and especially Dell to provide a monitor. Ironically, there are a ton of 4K monitors over in the PC world even though Windows still doesn’t do as smooth a job driving them usably. Pretty much the only thing missing is a 4K monitor for all these machines to drive! This is no surprise, since Apple has pioneered high-DPI displays, from the MacBook Pro to the Mac Pro and now the iMac.
#4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 MAC OS X#
Introducing the Dell P2715Q MonitorĪlthough Apple still doesn’t sell a standalone 4K display, Mac OS X and Apple’s new hardware are both pretty much ready for them.
#4K MONITOR FOR MAC PRO 2014 UPGRADE#
Then all of this will be moot when the Skylake MacBook Pros come out next month and you upgrade to something that can drive 4K natively over DisplayPort at 60 Hz. Then you’ll use The Google, find this article, tweak your monitor and your Mac, and have something that pretty much works. Then you’ll try the HDMI port and see that it does work. If you’re like me, you’re going to plug a DisplayPort to Mini cable into the monitor and your Mac and be disappointed when it shows up as a 2560×1440 display, complete with chunky pixels. So it’s not “plug and play” easy for most people.


