Can a dual monitor of MacBook Pro Retina implement the Retina display?
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Hi. i connect my Macbook pro retina 13" with Dell u2913 by mini-dp to dp cable. But there is kinda blurring(a little) on font and icon in Dell monitor. Is it possible to solve this problem? Reference site : http://alloe.tistory.com/107 or Force RGB mode in Mac OS X to fix the picture quality of an external monitor I recently bought a MacBook Pro (with âRetinaâ screen), but when I hooked it up to my Dell U2410 monitor via HDMI cable I was shocked by the poor picture quality. The contrast was all wrong and text was misshapen. No amount of calibration in the monitor or software would fix it. Short answer: OS X thinks my monitor is a TV, and is using the YCbCr colour space rather than RGB. I had to override an EDID setting to force the RGB colour space, and it is now working correctly. Long answer: I havenât owned a Mac for a while and had forgotten how difficult much of the âApple communityâ can be when it comes to anything that canât be adjusted in System Preferences. Googling for problems with external monitors on MacBooks found dozens of threads on official and unofficial Apple forums, all full of people with the same problem. The most common response was to blame the monitor, despite assurances from the stricken users that the monitor worked beautifully in Linux and Windows, even on the same machine under Boot Camp. âYou just havenât calibrated it!â, âYou are just too used to Retina now!â, âYou just need to buy a Thunderbolt display!â Apple people also like to solve problems by throwing more money at it. (I realise that owning a Mac makes me an Apple person, too. Hypocritical self-loather?) My lucky break was reading that the current colour space was âYCbCrâ when I was browsing the monitorâs settings menu. I was sure that it was using RGB when hooked up to my PC, so I started searching instead for forcing RGB mode in OS X. It didnât appear to be available out-of-the-box, but I have had some experience in overriding http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_display_identification_data settings for similar purposes so I searched instead for that. I found http://embdev.net/topic/284710 on the http://EmbDev.net forums. Mr Schwarz, thanks very much. Your thread and http://embdev.net/topic/284710#3027030was incredibly helpful and informative. It was written to fix problems connecting an external monitor via DisplayPort, but it fixed my HDMI issue just the same. Iâve summarised the required steps below. My last word is to wonder what Apple is playing at. It seems that this problem has been reported by a lot of people for a long time, and I expect it would require a fairly simple software update. Do they just not care about those using third-party components, or are they actively attempting to force people on to Thunderbolt displays? How to force RGB in Mac OS X Download the patch-edid.rb script from the forums thread above and put it in your home directory. Connect only the external monitor(s) in question (I closed my MacBook lid, for example). The script will make override files for any connected monitor. Type âruby patch-edid.rbâ in Terminal. A new folder will be created in your home directory. Move it into the â/System/Library/Displays/Overridesâ folder. If Finder tells you that you are overwriting an existing folder, consider backing it up first. Restart your computer, enjoy your monitor. To undo the changes, either delete the folder you had copied to the Overrides folder (if it didnât already exist) or replace it with the folder you had backed up. Updates If youâre having trouble with any of these steps, please have a look through the comments below (and note that there are multiple pages). Many questions have been answered with helpful tips from others. Update, 27 Oct 2013: If youâve applied this fix before, the OS X Mavericks update will overwrite it. Iâve successfully re-applied the fix by following exactly the same steps, and other commenters below have done so, too. Update, 13 Nov 2013: Andrew http://www.ireckon.net/2013/03/force-rgb-mode-in-mac-os-x-to-fix-the-picture-quality-of-an-external-monitor/comment-page-3#comment-9463 that he has modified the script to add some useful new features, and provides a link to his GitHub for those wishing to use it instead. Update, 28 Nov 2013: If the process appears to work but doesnât seem to make a difference, consider Tomâs http://www.ireckon.net/2013/03/force-rgb-mode-in-mac-os-x-to-fix-the-picture-quality-of-an-external-monitor/comment-page-3#comment-9491. Depending on your monitor an extra tweak may be required.
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Answer:
If you mean if it's possible to get your monitor Retina picture quality by plugging to your MacBook with Retina display? No, it would be cool if that was possible. It's about hardware, not software. -:) Apple defines Retina for a monitor as having such pixel density that human eye simply can't distinguish neighboring pixels. Retina picture quality standard will be different for different monitor resolution.
Artyom Dogtiev at Quora Visit the source
Other answers
It's unclear from your post what the actual resolution you're getting from that monitor is. Go into System Preferences / Displays to find out. The Dell U2913WM that you mention is a 2560 x 1080 display; I'm under the impression that newer thunderbolt MacBooks do not use the traditional DisplayPort protocol above regular DVI resolutions, so your mini-displayport to display port cable might be the problem. I'd suggest trying a Dual Link DVI adapter for this monitor. Apple sells one but the user reviews for it are terrible: http://store.apple.com/us/product/MB571Z/A/mini-displayport-to-dual-link-dvi-adapter ... the best option that works well for 2560 x 1440 is the 27" Apple Thunderbolt monitor, but even that can be flakey at times. Even then, that isn't "retina" quality, but a 4k (3840 by 2160) monitor might be what you're looking for: http://www.macworld.co.uk/feature/mac/round-4k-monitors-new-mac-pro-3492869/ ... however, at this point 4K monitors are only supported on the Mac Pro.
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