Hello everyone,
I've owned a 2018 MBP 13" (quad-core CPU-i5 2.3GHz, 16GB RAM) for about a year and recently I bought a 32" 4K external monitor (BenQ EW3270U) to work more comfortably with it while at home.
With the Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port, I was expecting the machine to be pretty fast (the cable from the screen is directly plugged into the laptop) and although it is the case for *very* simple tasks (web browsing, listening to music, typing documents), it is definitely slowing down when I'm asking for more. Lightroom editing for instance is really a pain in the arse: somewhat smooth when used on the Mac directly but sluggish when connected in clamshell mode to the screen. Same story when viewing a video on YT, the fullscreen on/off animations are not smooth. I'm using the scaled resolution of 2560x1440 (in 1080p, true "retina" mode, the text was too big for my liking and in native resolution it is illegible).
Of course I'm being picky here. It does perform well most of the time. But isn't it legitimate to complain about the lack of smoothness when I'm doing "pro" work? Isn't such a modern €2500 machine supposed to handle everything you throw at it perfectly?
Might a dedicated GPU be useful for that kind of scenario?
Thanks!
I've owned a 2018 MBP 13" (quad-core CPU-i5 2.3GHz, 16GB RAM) for about a year and recently I bought a 32" 4K external monitor (BenQ EW3270U) to work more comfortably with it while at home.
With the Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port, I was expecting the machine to be pretty fast (the cable from the screen is directly plugged into the laptop) and although it is the case for *very* simple tasks (web browsing, listening to music, typing documents), it is definitely slowing down when I'm asking for more. Lightroom editing for instance is really a pain in the arse: somewhat smooth when used on the Mac directly but sluggish when connected in clamshell mode to the screen. Same story when viewing a video on YT, the fullscreen on/off animations are not smooth. I'm using the scaled resolution of 2560x1440 (in 1080p, true "retina" mode, the text was too big for my liking and in native resolution it is illegible).
Of course I'm being picky here. It does perform well most of the time. But isn't it legitimate to complain about the lack of smoothness when I'm doing "pro" work? Isn't such a modern €2500 machine supposed to handle everything you throw at it perfectly?
Might a dedicated GPU be useful for that kind of scenario?
Thanks!
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