I just bought the Insignia USB to HDMI/DVI Adapter (NS-PU37H-BK) to use with my MacBook Air 2014, MacOS v10.13.6. I installed the drivers listed for 10.11 and above without success. Gofanco USB 3.0 to HDMI/DVI Video Card Adapter w/External Graphics Chipset and a HDMI-to-DVI Converter - up to 2560x1440 for Windows & Mac System (up to Mac OS 10.13.3 & Latest 10.14 ONLY) (USB3HDMI). The Microsoft Surface USB-C to HDMI adapter is straightforward. On one end is the USB-C plug, the other a female HDMI adapter. The cord connecting the two ends is six inches (15.2 cm) in length, which is long enough for most scenarios including WMR. Microsoft's dongle is HDMI 2.0 compatible and 4K-ready. More interestingly, the company notes that it is 'an active-format adapter' that supports AMD Eyefinity and NVIDIA. This reference to active format adapter is essential and one of the reasons why it may cost so much. Active format adapters make up for sources that do not support dual-mode DisplayPort (also known as DP++). My passport for mac support. SOLUTION Go to Control Panel / System / Harware / Device Manager / slide down to the list at Universal Serial Bus Controllers, you will find a USB Mass Storage Device with a yellow triangle. The adapters have extra hardware on them to do the DP++ conversion, making them more robust and compatible regardless of the systems being connected. That also can drive up the price. AMD Eyefinity and NVIDIA support ties into those company's own and often proprietary optimization for multi-display setup, which this adapter evidently allows. Unfortunately, I have not been able to determine if the adapter supports the newer HDCP 2.2 security standard for 4K UHD streaming content. While all HDCP 2.2 adapters support HDMI 2.0, not all HDMI 2.0 parts support HDCP 2.2. I've reached out to Microsoft to ask about support and will update this review accordingly. Update 1/4/18: Microsoft has now confirmed that the USB-C adapter does support HDCP 2.2. Finally, it should be evident that being HDMI 2.0 ipso facto means is not here either. That revision won't start seeing consumer applications until sometime in 2018, though. Windows Mixed Reality works beautifully. During my review of the, I noted that support for WMR seemed like an afterthought for Microsoft. The reason for the claim was port choice and placement. Would a full HDMI port have been warranted? Probably not, but it would have helped since WMR headsets exclusively use HDMI adapters for the current generation. I expect to see that shift over the next few years with USB-C connections instead. Placement is problematic, too, since the secondary USB-A plug needed for power delivery to the WMR headset is on the opposite side of the USB-C port. That means the cable needs to split and have enough slack to hit both sides of the Surface Book 2, which is larger on the 15-inch model. Additionally, I experienced a flickering issue when I ran WMR with the Surface Book 2 at first. At the time, all I had was an HP USB-C to HDMI converter, but Microsoft assured me that it was likely the converter not the laptop causing the problem. Luckily, the Microsoft Surface USB-C to HDMI adapter had no such problems. I ran a Dell WMR headset, and the experience was fantastic. Scenes were crisp with no odd image pulsing. Combined with the power of the NVIDIA GTX 1060 video card on the Surface Book 2 15, the whole experience was outstanding. Wine bottler. However, WineBottler 'wraps' or 'bottles' the separate prefixes in an application bundle. WineBottler allows users to bottle Windows applications as Mac apps. In other words, WineBottler is a tool similar to codeweavers' Crossover, where separate prefixes are created per app. WineBottler allows standalone (i.e., not requiring wine to be installed) applications to What's New in WineBottler. While I still don't love the split-port setup, overall, running WMR on the Surface Book 2 with this adapter is great. Converting to mixed reality isn't cheap The Microsoft Surface USB-C to HDMI adapter connected to my 4K OLED LG TV just fine with sound. Running UHD YouTube videos or content from Microsoft Movies & TV went without a hitch, with excellent color reproduction and full audio. The same goes for external displays.
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