![]() After all, bandwidth is the key enabler of everything. That seems like a big win for DisplayPort 2.0. > When connected to iPad Pro 12.9-inch (3rd and 4th generation), iPad Pro 11-inch (1st and 2nd generation), or iPad Air (5th generation), Studio Display USB-C ports deliver USB 2 data transfer speeds. HDMI 2.1 offers a more straightforward 48Gbps of bandwidth, up from HDMI 2.0’s 18GBps. In fact, that flaw is even present on this monitor: That's a huge flaw imo, cause falling back to alt-mode takes over the cable and blocks USB3/PCIe tunneling from working. Native USB4 tunneling only supports DisplayPort 1.4a (for now). ![]() And alt-mode 2.0 is only available on the most recent hosts with USB4 ports. ![]() With the main disadvantage that the USB ports on the monitor would drop to USB 2.0 speeds. One could use DisplayPort 2.0 alt-mode to carry that signal over a USB-C cable. ![]() Wikipedia's DisplayPort article has excellent tables about bandwidths of display formats: HDR (57 Gbit/s) is totally possible with DP 2.0. DisplayPort 2.0 supports up to 77.37 Gbit/s of bandwidth. ![]()
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