My wife has a Dell - U3818DW - that is huge and curved. She likes it. She uses it with a Microsoft Surface - the Surface is crap but the monitor works fine with it. And she has a MacBook Pro with the newer Apple chip (instead of Intel or whatever) - I think it is only 2 years old - and no problems with that. I've used it also, and the connection is pretty hardy. I can unplug her computer and plug in my computer (also a MacBook) and the monitor is recognized and my desktop appears immediately. Doesn't seem to matter which computer - MacBook, Surface, iPad, etc. It just switches. She also runs her Logitech fancy schmancy camera (Logitech Brio which she also recommends for its very high clarity and contrast as well as high quality microphone) connected to the monitor and that switches simply and easily too. The only downside is that positioning the camera requires a stand instead of sitting on the monitor where it would be too high. Tons better arrangement than trying to use the MacBook's camera and the monitor simultaneously. When she was shopping, most of the high-quality monitors did not have built-in cameras. She likes the curved concept because it functions well with peripheral vision required on a wide monitor (especially perhaps with glasses.) The monitor doesn't require region specificity when opening new windows - you can put them anywhere on the screen, move them around and resize as needed. Which is good because she'll have many different screens open while drafting or researching.
The only quirk is that the MacBook battery draws more power than it gets from the monitor, so if she leaves the laptop plugged into the monitor at night, the laptop slowly discharges. Then it starts waking up the monitor and asking to be plugged into power, accompanied by a soft "bong" sound. With the laptop and the monitor both awake, the power from the monitor convinces the laptop it is actually connected to power, so both devices go back to sleep only to wake each other up a few minutes later. Repeat. The MacBook has two USB-C ports, so the easy solution is plug the laptop into its power block if leaving it connected to the monitor. Or just unplug the laptop from the monitor. Usually she does neither, so I wake up and unplug it.
https://www.dell.com/ae/business/p/d...8dw-monitor/pd
Bookmarks