The new Mac Mini is supposedly much better for graphics. Wondering if I should get it and hook it to my imac 27" rather than buying a whole new setup for a mac mini... Thoughts?
How did you get your iMac to work as a target display ?If your iMac is pre-Retina, but with Thunderbolt (a 2011 or later) you can use it as a display for another Mac using Target Display Mode. I used my 2011 iMac as a home server for a while, using it in Target Display Mode for my MacBook Pro (alongside a 4K display and the MBP's built-in display.)
Sadly, Target Display Mode went away with the Retina iMacs. (I understand its omission for the original 5K, since a single DisplayPort connection couldn't handle 5K; but DisplayPort spec has been updated to support it now. C'mon, Apple, let me keep using your wonderful displays after the computer itself goes obsolete!)
I just ordered an M1 Mini mostly to "play around with." While the iMac-as-home-server has been replaced with a newer Intel Mini, and I have a second 4K display for my MBP to replace using the iMac-as-display, the iMac now lives in the kitchen as the "public use computer". Seeing as its now two-OSes-out-of-date, I might just hook the M1 Mini up to it and use the iMac *ONLY* as a display.
How did you get your iMac to work as a target display ?
I can't get the M1 Mini to work with a 2013 Pre Retina iMac.
I am using the Apple TB3-TB2 adapter to make the connection between the USB-C port of the M1 to the Thunderbolt 2 port of the iMac using a .5m Apple Thunderbolt cable.
Oh, that explains a lot!You're in "Thunderbolt Disk Mode" - Apple has never supported Target Display Mode at the same time as Thunderbolt Disk Mode. You have to be booted in to the OS on the iMac to use Target Display Mode.
And I wasn't able to get Target Display Mode working with the M1 Mini. Only with my Intel MacBook Pro. Apparently the M1 Mini doesn't support outputting video to Thunderbolt Target Display mode. (If you have an older pre-Thunderbolt iMac that supports Target Display Mode over mini DisplayPort, it should work, since there is no Thunderbolt negotiation going on there. But for a Thunderbolt iMac, it looks like TDM isn't usable from Apple Silicon Macs.)
No, Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 adapters do *NOT* pass through DisplayPort signal, they only work for actual Thunderbolt displays.Oh, that explains a lot!
So if I use my old 24" Apple Cinema Display (Mini DisplayPort) then the M1 should work the TB3-TB2 adapter ??