- Monitorcontrol no supported display found upgrade#
- Monitorcontrol no supported display found plus#
- Monitorcontrol no supported display found windows#
Monitorcontrol no supported display found windows#
So I pick up a beefy Windows machine for gaming and video editing. I know iOS is driving their +1T market cap, but come on. > I continue to be disappointed with Apple's desktopĪgree! I switched to MacOS during Tiger, and the experience has gotten steadily worse since then, double if you're not into the iOS-ification of their desktop OS. (Personally I appreciate having a second physical display next to the first, though how useful it is depends on the task and software.) (Presumably because when we evolved looking down typically involved closer objects than looking straight ahead.) Eyes are great at looking alternately straight ahead or substantially downward without moving or tilting the head.
![monitorcontrol no supported display found monitorcontrol no supported display found](https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/sNWuy9apIZzB9c_F7GsMqPwY4J4=/0x0:2040x1530/1200x0/filters:focal(0x0:2040x1530)/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/11478923/zenbookpro_vladsavov_computex2018_vrg2.jpg)
This physical arrangement works because human eyes are set up physiologically to easily swivel down and to focus closer and converge with less strain in the bottom part of the field of view than the top part. But keep the head upright and supported directly above the spinal column with the back straight (not tilting the head forward/back or resting it on a fixed external support for extended periods of time). If you track down stuff written by anatomy and vision experts, you'll find that among static positions it is best (causes least neck and/or eye strain) to keep the top edge at approximately eye level, push the display as far away from the head as possible given the desk and general context (it is much easier to focus on something 1 meter away for an extended time than something 20 cm away), and tilt the display so that the bottom is closer than the top, so that a perpendicular ray from the middle of the display is roughly aimed at the face. It is (wrong) conventional wisdom that the middle of the display should be at eye level. This was based on some (completely bogus) "ergonomics" advice which somehow worked its way into European office furniture standards and various official seeming guides. Lots of people seem to jack up their monitors on a stack of O'Reilly books or whatever, > top edge of the screen as close to eye level as possible. I just get the feeling that developers or users like me are an afterthought when it comes to Apple.
Monitorcontrol no supported display found upgrade#
Finder is still an abomination in comparison to any sane file browser.Īt this point, the experience definitely hasn't been smoother than with my last XPS15, and I am likely to move back to Windows with my next laptop upgrade at work. Opening new apps feels excruciatingly slow due to OSX sandboxing and I feel like I'm using a subpar laptop from 8 years ago.
![monitorcontrol no supported display found monitorcontrol no supported display found](https://assets.website-files.com/5bc9fe82c6c2f542901f0065/5d24e78fda6c3935a6e9ad60_NATHANREINDS-Faber-DTRH-LR-18.jpg)
Multi monitor support is a giant crapshoot and there is a 50-50 chance all monitors get recognized properly or you keep unplugging and replugging till all your monitors get recognized correctly.
Monitorcontrol no supported display found plus#
Some days, Zoom plus web browser will bring the entire machine to its knees and make it behave like a netbook from years past. I get regular kernel panic induced shutdowns that I can reproduce when plugging several different MBP compatible docks.
![monitorcontrol no supported display found monitorcontrol no supported display found](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-C9UK47XTX9s/WTMUKvgAZsI/AAAAAAAAGzU/1KoC09zPkbUJVQHu5hO44aw9HVE0NEwygCLcB/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/sc75823_arduino.jpg)
To be honest, as a new OSX user after a subpar experience with my XPS 15 9550, I was really looking forward to the "It just works" experience with my $3K+ MBP 16, but I have been sorely disappointed. Yup, this is why I've been holding off of upgrading to Big Sur along with this other external monitor deal breaker.