Displaylink Macos Software 10.13.4

That suggests that the issue is related to macOS 10.13.4’s display settings. Duet Display and Others In addition to DisplayLink, two apps that let Mac users turn an iPad into a secondary display. DisplayLink macOS Software. Dear Mac users: (displaylink series adopters And docking only). Unlike windows upgrade, all firmware are backward compatible We recommend that users who wish to use dual displays do not upgrade macOS devices to version 10.13.4 until DisplayLink releases a USB driver that DisplayLink and Apple are working together to.

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Apple’s latest update for macOS is causing critical issues for users of third-party display products, including two popular screen extender platforms.

Reportedly, macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 breaks support for popular third-party display products and platforms. The problems are not isolated, either.

According to reports, “critical bugs” within macOS 10.13.4 are just rendering certain features of those platforms useless.

DisplayLink

DisplayLink, the producers of technology platforms that allows users to connect computers and displays via various methods, acknowledged the issue in a forum post on March 30.

Apparently, installing macOS 10.13.4 will cause displays connected to a Mac via DisplayLink’s docks or graphics hardware to simply go blank.

The company said it is working on a new driver that will enable a clone mode workaround, but not mirror or extended display modes.

DisplayLink added that users who need those functionalities should not update to macOS 10.13.4.

Other DisplayLink-enabled functionality — like wired internet and audio capabilities — are seemingly unaffected. That suggests that the issue is related to macOS 10.13.4’s display settings.

Duet Display and Others

In addition to DisplayLink, two apps that let Mac users turn an iPad into a secondary display also seem to be impacted by macOS 10.13.4.

Duet Display, for example, wrote in a support article that upgrading to macOS 10.13.4 will cause the app to stop functioning.

Apparently, the bug causes the Duet Display app to “hang” and simply become inoperable on the new OS.

Duet Display, which runs for $19.99 on the App Store, allows Mac users to use an iPad as a second display by connecting it via Lightning cable.

In response, the developers of the app are recommending that users refrain from downloading or instilling macOS High Sierra 10.13.4, and to contact Apple via its bug reporting platform.

Reports also seem to indicate that the issue is affecting similar apps, like iDisplay and Air Display. The developers of the former app tweeted a warning to users late last month.

Air Display users: Please don’t update your host Mac to macOS 10.13.4. It introduces severe WindowServer bugs that crash most inelegantly when you connect to a virtual monitor like Air Display (or its competitors). 10.13.3 still works fine. Hopefully Apple will fix 10.13.4 soon.

— Avatron Software (@Avatron) March 30, 2018

Additional Information

Currently, it’s unclear what exact change in macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 is causing the third-party display issues — but some are theorizing that it could be the addition of eGPU support.

On another note, it seems that the problems are not affecting external displays connected to a Mac through Apple’s first-party tech — like DisplayPort or the Thunderbolt standard.

If you use or rely on a third-party display service or product, it’s currently recommended that you hold off on upgrading to macOS 10.13.4.

If you’ve already updated and have run into issues, it might be smart to revert to a previous version of macOS using Time Machine (assuming that you backed up your system before you updated).

DisplayLink and Duet Display both said they are currently working on resolutions, with the latter firm stating that it “actively looking into workarounds.” Apple has also been alerted to the issue and may be working on a patch itself.

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(Redirected from User:Slackbus/DisplayLink)
DisplayLink Corp.
Private
IndustrySemiconductors
Founded2003
FounderDr. Quentin Stafford-Fraser,
Martin King
Headquarters
Palo Alto, California, US
Worldwide
ProductsUSB Graphics chips
Number of employees
160 (2016)
Websitedisplaylink.com

DisplayLink (formerly Newnham Research) is a semiconductor and software technology company. DisplayLink USB graphics technology is designed to connect computers and displays using USB, Ethernet, and WiFi. It also allows multiple displays to be connected to a single computer. DisplayLink's primary customers are notebook OEMs (HP, Dell, Toshiba, Lenovo, Acer, Asus), LCD monitor manufacturers (AOC, ASUS) and PC accessory vendors (Startech.com, Targus, Belkin, Kensington, Plugable), supporting the Microsoft Windows, macOS, Android, ChromeOS and Linux operating systems.[1]

DisplayLink operates worldwide with offices in the United States, the United Kingdom, Poland, and Taiwan.[2] The company is privately funded and to date has raised $75 million in financing from venture capital organizations Atlas Venture, Balderton Capital, Cipio Partners DAG Ventures and DFJ Esprit.[3]

Company history[edit]

DisplayLink was founded in 2003 as Newnham Research by Dr. Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Martin King.[4]The Newnham Research team invented NIVO (Network In, Video Out) designed for low cost thin client computing over Ethernet networks.[5] The company referred to these thin-client computers as network displays.

In 2006, Newnham Research launched its first commercially available product in partnership with the Kensington Computer Products Group: a USB 2.0 universal laptop docking station designed for the retail market.[6]

In November 2006, Newnham Research renamed itself to DisplayLink, a name that better described their display connection technology.[7]

DisplayLink launched its first semiconductor product family, the DL-120 and DL-160 USB 2.0 graphics devices, in January 2007,[8] signalling an important change in the company's business plan from FPGA-based systems to semiconductors. The DL-120 and DL-160 allow up to six additional monitors to be added to a PC through USB 2.0.

In May 2009, DisplayLink launched its second semiconductor product family, the DL-125, DL-165, and DL-195 USB 2.0 graphics devices. This DL-1x5 family brings improved performance, an increase in maximum resolution to 2048x1152, and the integration of a DVI transmitter and video DAC. The first products to ship with the new DL-1x5 chips were the SamsungLapfit LD190G and LD220G monitors.[9]

On November 17, 2009, DisplayLink announced their first Thin Client product based on their USB 2.0 virtual graphics technology, designed for Microsoft Windows MultiPoint Server.[10] Thin client manufacturer HP was the first to announce a product based on DisplayLink USB Graphics technology with the launch of the t100 Thin Client.[11]

At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in 2012, DisplayLink announced several products incorporating video and graphics over a USB 3.0 'SuperSpeed USB' connection, showing substantial improvements in performance, resolution support, and video quality.[12]

At CES in 2013, DisplayLink demonstrated USB Power Delivery in which a standard USB cable is used to charge a laptop computer.[13]

At CES in 2016, DisplayLink announced their latest docking chip, DL-6000 series, to support dual 4Kp60 over USB 3.0.[14]

At CES in 2017, DisplayLink demonstrated Wireless VR using DisplayLink graphics over a wireless 60 GHz link.[15]

Technology[edit]

The DisplayLink network graphics technology is composed of Virtual Graphics Card (VGC) software that is installed on a PC and a Hardware Rendering Engine (HRE) embedded or connected to a display device. The DisplayLink VGC software is based on a proprietary adaptive graphics technology. The VGC software runs on a Windows, macOS, or Linux host PC and takes information from the graphics adapter and compresses the changes to the display from the last update and sends it over any standard network including USB, Wireless USB, Ethernet, and Wi-Fi. After receiving the data, the HRE then transforms it back into pixels to be displayed on the monitor. While the basic network graphics technology can be used on a variety of network interfaces (Ethernet, and Wi-Fi), DisplayLink has to date only designed products around USB 2.0, USB 3.0, and Wireless USB connectivity.[16]

Products with DisplayLink technology are supported on Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP, macOS, Android, Chrome OS and Ubuntu.[17]

IC Generations[edit]

Displaylink driver for windows 10

DL-1x0[edit]

The DL-1x0 series were the first generation of DisplayLink ICs, launched in January 2007. The family consisted of 2 products: DL-120 and DL-160, differentiated by the maximum resolution supported by the device. DL-120 supported up to 1280x1024/1400x1050 and DL-160 up to 1600x1200/1680x1050.

The ICs supported a USB 2.0 input and a 24bit RGB output or LVDS output. Additional chips needed in the design are an EEPROM and DDR Memory. If the design required an Analog RGB (VGA) or DVI output an additional chip was needed to convert the 24bit RGB output to VGA or DVI.[18]

The DisplayLink website no longer shows the DL-1x0 ICs available, so are presumed to be no longer available (as of February 2013).

DL-1x5[edit]

The DL-1x5 series were introduced in May 2009. The family consists of 4 products: DL-115, DL-125, DL-165 and DL-195, again differentiated by the maximum resolution supported by the device. Features of the DL-1x5 family are:[19]

  • Integrated DVI, VGA, TTL and LVDS (FPI)
  • Dual core design (DL-195/DL-165)
  • Maximum resolution supported: 2048 x 1152
  • Integrated USB 2.0
  • DisplayLink DL 2+ Compression

DL-3xxx[edit]

The DL-3x00 series was first demonstrated at IDF in September 2011.[20] It supports dual video outputs (DL-3900 and DL-3950) and integrated 5.1 audio and Gigabit Ethernet. It also integrated a new compression scheme, called DL3.0 and content protection using HDCP 2.0 encryption.[21]

The DL-3xxx IC won the Best of CES Innovations 2011 Design and Engineering Award Honoree.[22]

DL-41xx[edit]

The DL-41xx series came out in 2013. It is a USB 3.0 to LVDS device, supporting DL3 compression and HDCP 2.0 encryption.[23] It is designed to be embedded into monitors to enable USB as a video input on displays. It is described as a low power device, which enables it to be powered from the USB bus without the need for an external power supply. Power and video data can be delivered over a single cable.[24]

The IC has been integrated into a number of portable USB displays from AOC, ASUS and Taeseok.[25]

DL-5xxx[edit]

The DL-5xxx series was the first USB 3.0 graphics chipset to support 4KUHD resolutions. The chipset was launched in 2014 at Interop.[26]

DL-6xxx[edit]

The DL-6xxx series was announced at CES 2016.[14] This chip supports dual 4Kp60 displays over a USB-C or USB Standard A connector.

OS Support[edit]

DisplayLink technology does not install any hardware on the USB host device, therefore a driver must be installed. DisplayLink driver support for OSes are listed below:

Microsoft Windows[edit]

The current DisplayLink drivers (June 2017) support Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10. Support for Windows XP (32bit only) and Windows Vista are available with older DisplayLink driver versions.[27]

There is no support for Windows RT versions.[28]

macOS[edit]

The current DisplayLink drivers are for OS X 10.8 and later.[29]DisplayLink confirmed that macOS version 10.13.4 through 10.13.6 broke compatibility with their driver. DisplayLink is supported on macOS 10.14.macOS 10.13.4 introduced support for external graphics processors also known as eGPUs.[30]

Android[edit]

An Android app was made available in the Google Play store, called DisplayLink Desktop, in May 2015, however it is only available for Android 5.0 Lollipop, and later.

Linux[edit]

Current generation of USB3 chips is supported by binary-only driver on Ubuntu. The Linux kernel 3.4 also contains a basic DisplayLink driver.

DisplayLink driver installer for Debian and Ubuntu based Linux distribution (Elementary OS, Mint, Kali, Deeping and et cetera) is available as part of displaylink-debian project.[31]

There was a DisplayLink-supported open source project called libdlo with the goal of bringing support to Linux and other platforms.[32] There are also unofficial reverse-engineered specifications available for older revisions of DisplayLink technology.[33]

Chrome OS[edit]

DisplayLink enabled devices can be used on Chrome OS from R51 onwards.[34]

Criticism[edit]

Summer 2012 10.8 OS X problems[35] were addressed by a new DisplayLink Mac driver announced at the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show[36]. An article on DisplayLink's website said that minor issues under Mavericks (October 2013) and Yosemite (October 2014) were being resolved in collaboration with Apple.[37]

Customers have also complained that DisplayLink USB3 video certified technologies have falsely advertised support for Linux, or not stated that it is OS dependent when running the Display link 3xxx/41xx chipset.[citation needed]

DisplayLink finally responded to this in August 2015 by releasing a binary driver for Ubuntu, which supports all current USB 3.0 ICs.[38] It is unclear if other Linux distributions will have DisplayLink support, however details on how to port the driver to other distributions have been provided on the DisplayLink website.[39]

References[edit]

  1. ^'DisplayLink Customer Products'. Archived from the original on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2010-02-16.
  2. ^'List of DisplayLink Offices'. Retrieved 2010-02-16.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^'DisplayLink Investors'. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  4. ^'About DisplayLink (DisplayLink Website)'. Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  5. ^'What is a Ndiyo system?'. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  6. ^'DisplayLink launches high-speed USB graphics technology for multi-monitor computing applications' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2006-04-11. Retrieved 2008-10-08. .. its first design win with Kensington Computer Products Group, who will use the USB NIVO in a universal laptop docking station ..
  7. ^'Newnham Technology/Research Changes Name to DisplayLink' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2006-11-06. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  8. ^'DisplayLink Launches ICs for Connecting Computer Displays via USB and Wireless USB' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2006-01-09. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  9. ^'DisplayLink Ships Higher Performance USB Chips Delivering HD Graphics To New Samsung Lapfit Displays' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2009-05-19. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  10. ^'DisplayLink Virtual Graphics to Enable Simple, Affordable 10 Seat Thin Client Computing Through Microsoft Windows Multipoint Server 2010 Technology' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2009-11-17. Archived from the original on 2012-07-29. Retrieved 2010-02-16.
  11. ^'HP Expands Education Portfolio with Low-cost, Easy-to-use Technology for the Classroom' (Press release). HP. 2009-11-17. Retrieved 2010-02-16.
  12. ^'DisplayLink Virtual Graphics Powers Targus' USB 3.0 Docks, Adapters' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2012-01-10.
  13. ^'DisplayLink Demonstrates New USB Power Delivery charging PC notebooks while simultaneously delivering USB Graphics, Video, Ethernet, and Audio connectivity over a single USB cable'. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  14. ^ ab'DisplayLink Announces Advanced Dual 4kp60 USB-C Docking Chipset With USB Standard-A Backwards Compatibility at CES 2016'.
  15. ^'DisplayLink Showcases Ultra-Low Latency Wireless VR Concept at CES Las Vegas 2017'. www.displaylink.com. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
  16. ^'DisplayLink Fact Sheet'(PDF). Retrieved 2011-09-02.
  17. ^'Windows Driver Downloads'. DisplayLink. Retrieved 2015-09-17.
  18. ^'DisplayLink DL-120 and DL-160 Product Brief'(pdf). Retrieved 2013-02-06.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^'DisplayLink DL-1x5 Series'.
  20. ^'DisplayLink Debuts First USB 3.0 Graphics Adapter At IDF'.
  21. ^'DisplayLink DL-3000 Series Product Brief'(PDF).
  22. ^'DisplayLink Named as Best of CES Innovations 2011 Design and Engineering Award Honoree'. Reuters. 2010-11-09.
  23. ^'DL-41xx Product Brief'(PDF). Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  24. ^'DisplayLink DL-41xx family'.
  25. ^'DisplayLink launches new USB monitor chip family'. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  26. ^'DisplayLink launches industry leading DL-5700 USB 3.0 UHD 4K Chipset with Audio and Integrated Ethernet at Interop 2014'.
  27. ^'DisplayLink Windows Downloads'.
  28. ^'Which Operating systems does DisplayLink currently support'.
  29. ^'DisplayLink macOS Software'.
  30. ^'Use an external graphics processor with your Mac'.
  31. ^Hodzic, Adnan (2019-11-29), DisplayLink driver installer for Debian and Ubuntu based Linux distributions.: AdnanHodzic/displaylink-debian, retrieved 2019-12-01
  32. ^'DisplayLink Releases Linux Source Code for its USB Graphics Processors' (Press release). DisplayLink. 2009-05-15. Retrieved 2009-05-15.
  33. ^'Unofficial DisplayLink Hardware Specs'. 2009-01-09. Retrieved 2009-05-15.
  34. ^'Chrome OS support'.
  35. ^'Mountain Lion Problems'.
  36. ^'DisplayLink Announces New USB 3.0 Mac Driver'.
  37. ^'Known issues with DisplayLink on OS X 10.9, 10.10 and 10.11 (Mavericks, Yosemite and El Capitan)'. DisplayLink Support. Palo Alto, California: DisplayLink. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  38. ^'DisplayLink Ubuntu driver'.
  39. ^'Porting the DisplayLink Ubuntu driver to other Linux distributions'.

External links[edit]

  • DisplayLink Zero Client Overview[permanent dead link]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=DisplayLink&oldid=949409658'