Lg tb2
But the question is this... Just because it's thunderbolt 2 does that mean that the UM95 on a MBPr will support 60Hz? MST will still be disabled for all OS X users (except the Mac Pro)... Supposedly the LG display is being made specifically with the nMP in mind. I don't personally know if simply using the TB2 spec even brings MST into the picture? SST would hypothetically work, but display manufacturing tech hasn't caught up yet to the within-reach prosumer market.
And I don't do cinema work either. I'm a product designer by trade, so a lot of 3D rendering which 4 cores/8 threads can handle, and don't get me wrong the Haswell MBPr is tough as nails, it's just this ONE limitation, especially when we all know the 750M is capable of pushing 4K displays. And I really hate the way Apple mislead people with their marketing.
I just want my new Apple Thunderbolt 2 Display for goodness sake!! Apple can you hear me?!
No one wants your old 2011 Display!!
Otherwise I'm going to have to do something I've never done before and purchase the NEW LG Ultra Wide (LG 29UM95) Thunderbolt 2 display.
Imagine that, someone else coming out with Thunderbolt 2 before Apple? Go figure?
But the question is this... Just because it's thunderbolt 2 does that mean that the UM95 on a MBPr will support 60Hz? MST will still be disabled for all OS X users (except the Mac Pro)... Supposedly the LG display is being made specifically with the nMP in mind. I don't personally know if simply using the TB2 spec even brings MST into the picture? SST would hypothetically work, but display manufacturing tech hasn't caught up yet to the within-reach prosumer market.
And I don't do cinema work either. I'm a product designer by trade, so a lot of 3D rendering which 4 cores/8 threads can handle, and don't get me wrong the Haswell MBPr is tough as nails, it's just this ONE limitation, especially when we all know the 750M is capable of pushing 4K displays. And I really hate the way Apple mislead people with their marketing.