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Thunderbolt is the brand name of a hardware interface for the connection of external peripherals to a computer.It was developed by Intel in collaboration with Apple. [7] [8] It was initially marketed under the name Light Peak, and first sold as part of an end-user product on 24 February 2011.
The Apple Thunderbolt Display is a 27-inch flat panel computer monitor developed by Apple Inc. and sold from July 2011 to June 2016. Originally priced at $999, [1] it replaced Apple’s 27-inch Cinema Display.
The Studio Display is the first Apple-branded consumer display released since the Apple Thunderbolt Display was discontinued in 2016. [2] In the interim, Apple worked with LG to design the Thunderbolt 3-enabled UltraFine line, consisting of 21.5-inch (later revised to 24-inch) 4K and 27-inch 5K displays.
On Classic Mac OS, this means FireWire 2.3.3 or later and Mac OS 8.6 or later are required to use a FireWire target. [1] The host computer may run Microsoft Windows, but with some possible shortcomings: to read a Mac's HFS-formatted partitions, extra drivers such as MacDrive, TransMac, MacDisk, or HFSExplorer are necessary. Users also must ...
Adds the Precision Touchpad driver for devices with Apple T2 chips; 6.1.17 March 19, 2022 Added support for the Studio Display and updates drivers for AMD and Intel GPUs; 6.1.16 August 22, 2022 Adds WiFi WPA3 support; Fixes a Bluetooth driver issue that could occur when resuming from Sleep or Hibernation modes; 6.1.19 August 29, 2022
Apple's manufacture history of CRT displays began in 1980, starting with the Monitor /// that was introduced alongside and matched the Apple III business computer. It was a 12″ monochrome (green) screen that could display 80×24 text characters and any type of graphics, however it suffered from a very slow phosphor refresh that resulted in a "ghosting" video effect.
The Pro Display XDR is a 32-inch flat panel computer monitor created by Apple, based on an LG supplied display, [1] that was released on December 10, 2019. It was announced at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference on June 3, 2019, along with the 2019 Mac Pro .
Windows 11 operating system; Intel Tiger Lake 11th Gen Core i5 or Core i7 processor; Intel Iris Xe graphics, Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 Ti (Consumer), or NVIDIA RTX A2000 (Enterprise) GPU with 4 GB of GDDR6 RAM; 120 Hz refresh rate and Dolby Vision support; 16 or 32 GB of LPDDR4X RAM; 256 GB to 2 TB NVME SSD storage; 2 Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports