This one from Belkin is $299 and can connect up to two displays.
MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2013) - Technical SpecificationsĪs for an external display and using a Thunderbolt device, I think it might be possible to use an adapter/hub/dock to do that. 15.4-inch (diagonal) LED-backlit glossy or optional antiglare widescreen display with support for millions of colors. It is in very good overall condition and show only some light signs of use.The MacBook Pro Core i5 2.3 13-Inch (Mid-2018 True Tone Display, Touch Bar, Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports) is powered by a 14 nm, 8th Generation Coffee Lake 2.3 GHz Intel Core i5 processor (8259U), with four independent processor cores on a single. Thunderbolt 2 starts showing up in later versions of the MacBook Pro, like this one: MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2012) - Technical Specifications This model supports an external display at 2560×1600 and passes an audio signal. All the mid-2012 models (including Retina) are Thunderbolt 1, although the Retina models have two of them (but no FireWire port). This MacBook Pro 2012 13 has a native resolution and a widescreen TFT active-matrix of 1280×800, and a LED-backlit display of 2560 by 1600 equipped with an IPS technology. Answer (1 of 3): Q: How do I connect MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012) to an HP monitor A: Plug in the cable, turn everything on, done. Get the pros and cons, key specs, and reviews of the Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch with Retina display (mid 2012) from users, Engadget editors, and other tech reviewers. Lanstrad1 wrote: 1) Now, is mid-2012 TB 1 or TB 2 ? And are there adapters for TB3 to TB1 « and » adapters for TB3 ro TB2 ? Or these are the same?Ģ) this would also leaves me with another issue: once used for the interface, i am stuck with just my 13 inches screen - no way to connect to an external monitor, right?