In this case, the older Intel chipsets simply don’t support Thunderbolt.  :-(

> On Apr 26, 2016, at 2:27 AM, Larry Colen <l...@red4est.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> Mark C wrote:
>> Thanks, Igor. I think you summarize the situation very well. My leaning
>> right now is to go with a wide gamut monitor first and then maximize the
>> resolution within the limits of what I have decided to spend. I might
>> need to up the size I am considering to 27 inch diagonal - more options
>> at the large size - but there seem to be some workable solutions. I'm
>> not too worried about some applications not recognizing the wide-gamut
>> color space. I also confirmed the the i1Display calibration tool will
>> work with a wide gamut monitor, so no issue there...
>> 
>> I can order form B&H for a few days anyhow, so that gives me some time
>> to research.
>> 
> 
> A couple of thoughts:
> 
> You don't necessarily need both displays to be super high quality. You could 
> just do everything where color was critical on the expensive display.
> 
> Do let us know what you end up getting. I mentioned that used mac pro I got a 
> great deal on, it turns out that my thunderbolt display does not work with 
> it. I suspect that backward compatibility is against the macintologist 
> religion or something.
> 
> -- 
> Larry Colen  l...@red4est.com (postbox on min4est) http://red4est.com/lrc
> 
> 
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