What's the best way to add another? I was thinking a USB adapter I could plug a third monitor into, but would use some advice on what exactly to purchase.Setup is a newish Latitude on a docking station, and I want to use the laptop monitor, plus two additional monitors (1600X1200), which each have analog and digital ports. The docking station has 1 HDMI and 1 VGA port, but I am unable to activate all three monitors in Windows 7, and when I try I get an error message roughly like the title of this thread.What should I buy to fix this?
12/27/2012 2:53:03 PM
Anything you buy is going to be pretty crummy. Usb2.0 can't carry the bandwidth for high resolution video, but you can probably get by with 1600x1200. The frame rate will probably be ass, and probably only good for email/writing. I've seen the USB adapters but the one or two I tried several years ago were garbage.
12/27/2012 3:01:39 PM
12/27/2012 3:06:19 PM
^They don't support triple monitors either, unless something has changed in the last generation.Just looked up a bunch of the USB->VGA and USB->DVI adapters, and they have exactly the same problems they always have. You get zero hardware acceleration, so no flash video, no 3d, abysmal WPF and Silverlight performance, horrible framerates even for web browsing, and very limited color depth options.
12/27/2012 3:27:58 PM
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/06/new-macbooks-can-manage-many-many-monitors/Airs can support 3, macbook pros can support 4
12/27/2012 3:35:42 PM
^^^ Derp derp, this is a work computer. Thanks for dropping in with the fanboyism though ^^ I'm fine with those things, I knew it was going to be a little laggy getting into this. I guess I just need someone to point me towards the best of these poor solutions ]
12/27/2012 3:47:21 PM
Not fanboyism, just the only solution I know of to your problem.
12/27/2012 3:51:24 PM
You could go with an external graphics card. There's the old Matrox eXpansion DualHead2Go module that would add an additional 2 monitors using DVI's. It's pricey at $160. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16815106032There should be other eGPU solutions out there, but from what I recall, they are even more expensive that involved specific docking stations that allow the use of MXM cards. Even asus had their own solution back in 2007, the XG station, that died out the following year since its $400 price tag and the use of the budget 7900GS (later upgraded to 8600GT) lacked any significant performance for its price.http://www.asus.com/Graphics_Cards/External_Graphics_Card/XG_Station/There's been plenty appearances from many companies over the years in their take of eGPU solutions in consumer trade shows, but not one reasonable priced solution in recent years have turned up. Then again I haven't really followed that product category like a hawk.Another idea is a DIY eGPU solution. It will hinder your mobility, but think of the possibility of adding a full sized GPU to your laptop!http://lifehacker.com/5851902/turn-a-low+powered-laptop-into-a-gaming-machine-with-an-external-video-card-dockhttp://forums.overclockers.com.au/showthread.php?t=988062http://forum.notebookreview.com/e-gpu-external-graphics-discussion/418851-diy-egpu-experiences.html
12/27/2012 4:38:29 PM
http://www.displaylink.com/shop/adapters
12/27/2012 4:56:36 PM
12/27/2012 6:50:32 PM
12/27/2012 6:53:12 PM
I use a DisplayLink based one at work and it does video and light 3D fine. I tend to drag video off of that monitor since it makes everything that's NOT the video distort, but other than that it's great -- there's no perceivable difference between that screen and my other two. I use it for a 1600x1200 (max supported res.) wing monitor. There are USB3 versions out now that should do higher resolution, a guy at work just got one to push a 1920x1200 monitor, and it seems to work fine so far. The only caveat with those seems to be that they're mostly HDMI, so you need to plug it in to a HDMI>DVI converter.
12/28/2012 12:17:05 PM
12/28/2012 2:25:03 PM
^^ Yeah, I imagine USB3 would make these things much more usable, but then most systems (laptops) that would need one probably don't have USB3.
12/29/2012 12:17:38 PM
You don't get 3 thunderbolt monitors.You get 3 regular monitors, and 2 mDP to DVI adapters, and an HDMI to DVI adapter.
12/29/2012 1:54:02 PM
I have a USB displaylink monitor, it's plenty good enough to move my Outlook window or something to that monitor. I've even extended AutoCAD to it and it was usable enough.
12/29/2012 4:59:46 PM
1/3/2013 3:25:11 PM
Something like this: http://www.amazon.com/Plugable-UD-3000-Universal-2048x1152-Ethernet/dp/B008N06I2I/ref=pd_cp_pc_2USB 3.0. Essentially an additional docking station. Supports up to 1920 by 1200. Targis has one too: http://www.amazon.com/Targus-Docking-Station-Ultrabooks-ACP70USZ/dp/B005YR1PV2/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1357248456&sr=1-1&keywords=targus+usb+3.0+dock
1/3/2013 4:27:50 PM
Think I'm going to try this out to save my workplace some cash. It was that or the Matrox I think.http://www.everythingusb.com/iogear-usb-hd-video-adapter-21132.htmlReview looks pretty solid, especially I just need it for office work.
1/4/2013 1:17:39 PM
Mine is an IOGEAR, though that's kind of a red herring because almost all of them (^ & ^^ too) use chips (and drivers) from DisplayLink.
1/4/2013 5:02:12 PM