![]() However, those cases are typically not behavior like you're describing where nothing is detected at all. ![]() Obviously they SHOULD work, but a surprising number of Mac users are reporting problems with recent Dell displays, and it’s not entirely clear where the underlying problem is in those cases. Otherwise, it’s possible that the issue is that you’re working with Macs. The Cable Matters 201025-BLK-1m supports all of those standards and is far less expensive than what you paid for your Thunderbolt 3 cable. jphughan, I think he is saying MacBook Pro TB2 out port -> Apple TB2 to TB2 cable -> P2415Q mDP in port (not working) I have no idea what cable he means here, 'Using «ordinary» DP to Thunderbolt cable works fine.'. Try a USB-C cable that is rated for supporting DisplayPort Alt Mode, either USB 3.1 Gen 1 or USB 3.1 Gen 2, and 100W USB Power Delivery. When speaking about cabling from PC to a monitor, you always want to mention the PC out port first, like below. I wrote a long post about the various differentiating factors of USB-C and TB3 cables and addressed this, linked below. Active TB3 cables do not work as regular USB-C cables except for power and USB 2.0 data, which isn’t enough for running a display. Did you buy an “active” Thunderbolt 3 cable that has signal booster chips built into the cable in order to allow longer cable lengths? Based on the price you paid, you probably did.
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