Using the USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) cable to connect laptop to ThinkPad USB-C Dock Gen 2 and then from the Docking station to connect through as well a USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) to a monitor that supports 120Hz.īy doing so, theoretically can one surpass the problem of the 1.4 HDMI limitation of data transfer mentioned above. I'm thinking about the following scenario: This update addresses the Intel security advisory INTEL-SA-00189. A graphics or video driver is the software that enables communication between the graphics card and the operating system, games, and applications. Running on a laptop: Lenovo ThinkPad T590 - with UHD Graphics 620, connected then to a: ThinkPad USB-C Dock Gen 2 and then connecting a monitor with say 120Hz capability. This package contains the driver for the Intel HD Graphics 620. Now my question from a different angle, is: what about the following scenario: "1080o 120 or 144Hz need a bandwidth of 7.46 Gbps or 8.96 Gbps respectively, so the bandwidth via HDMI is not enough. " he meant here the 1.4 HDMI The reason I`m asking this again after reading Sebastian's answer from the link above, is, that he was stating: This package installs the software for Graphics driver to enable Intel HD Graphics 620. Could you please help out with the answer for the question from the topic title?Ī similar question was asked & Sebastian answered here, but I`m asking from a bit of a different angle.Ĭ/t5/Graphics/%C4%B0ntel-Hd-Graphics-620-120hz/m-p/1242212#M92978
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