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A single Thunderbolt 3 or later port provides data transfer, support for two 4K 60 Hz displays, and quick notebook charging up to 100W with a single cable. Any Thunderbolt or USB dock can connect to a Thunderbolt 3 computer. USB devices can be connected to a Thunderbolt 3 or later port. DisplayPort and Mini DisplayPort devices are supported.
Dell Precision is a ... Dell announced the first generation of Precision mobile workstations of this series with model numbers ... 1.84 kg (4.1 lb) USB-C. Thunderbolt ...
Dock connector on a 2011's HP EliteBook laptop. A dock connector is an electrical connector used to attach a mobile device simultaneously to multiple external resources. Dock connectors typically carry a variety of signals and power, through a single connector, to simplify the process of docking the device.
USB 3.1 Gen 1 – newly marketed as SuperSpeed or SS, 5 Gbit/s signaling rate over 1 lane using 8b/10b encoding (raw data rate: 500 MB/s); replaces USB 3.0. USB 3.1 Gen 2 – new , marketed as SuperSpeed+ or SS+ , 10 Gbit/s signaling rate over 1 lane using 128b/132b encoding (raw data rate: 1212 MB/s).
DisplayPort 1.4 and Thunderbolt 4.0 over USB Type C Connector N/A 1 2230 M.2 PCIe 4 NVMe N/A 1x USB 4, 4x USB 3.2 Gen 2 (1x Type C) 7090 June 2021 Intel Q570: Intel Core i3, i5, i7, i9 (11th gen/Rocket lake) DMI 3.0 x8 DDR4, 2 SODIMM 3200 128 GB MT, SFF, Micro Pro 2 Up to RTX 3070 Super and i9-11900K K Sku on MT, Up to AMD RX 640 on MFF N/A
Cable length should be 2.0 m or less for Gen 1 and 1.0 m or less for Gen 2. Thunderbolt Type-C to Type-C active cable Thunderbolt 3 (40 Gbit/s) Alternate Mode with cables longer than 0.8 m requires active Type-C cables that are certified and electronically marked for high-speed Thunderbolt 3 transmission, similarly to high-power 5 A cables.
The Thunderbolt 3 connection standard was originally to include DisplayPort 1.3 capability, but the final release ended up with only version 1.2 for Intel® 6000 Series Thunderbolt™ 3 Controllers. Later Intel® 7000 Series Thunderbolt™3 Controllers would come to support DisplayPort 1.4 capability including HDR.
The Lightning connector was introduced on September 12, 2012, with the iPhone 5, as a replacement for the 30-pin dock connector. [3] The iPod Touch (5th generation), iPod Nano (7th generation), [4] iPad (4th generation) and iPad Mini (1st generation) followed in October and November 2012 as the first devices with Lightning.