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回報翻譯問題
And that's exactly why I ask. Hopefully, they will release more details soon enough.
I tested out my steam deck and I was able to output two HDMI signals one display port signal and the steam deck screen simultaneously so it looks like it can actually end up powering three external monitors and it's screen at the same time.
The hub I use is the Anker USB c 13 in 1 hub.
Today, when in "Gaming Mode" (default), only one monitor will be shown the game and interface, the others will be shown a black screen. In desktop mode, the desktop can be extended with unique windows on each monitor.
I do not know if there are any plans to add the capability of extending displays using Steam's "Gaming Mode".
3x1080p, cool, but poor little thing. How does it perform?
I would even argue it handles it much better than most laptops I've used since it does in fact have a decent GPU in it and most people use laptops with slow onboard GPUs (2d desktop performance is a thing, it's non-negligible)
Edit: I use the term MST here - which is a valid term, but might not apply to USB-C devices as I thought... seems the term to use may be MHL, but everything else is the same so I'll leave it as-is. I'm no expert, if anyone can clear this up it'd be appreciated!
The point of my post was mostly to validate Steam Deck stated specs of DP 1.4 with Alt-mode support is correct, and MST works (this is unfortunately not a given - sometimes the hardware is there but can't be leveraged due to lacking proper driver support or configuration. It wouldn't technically be wrong for Valve to advertise it if it weren't enabled, but they did the right thing and launched it in a well-functioning state).
I won't attempt a full MST lesson here, but the tl;dr is: Each DP port has Xgbps bandwidth available to it as determined by the DP version and the connected device (hub/dock) and connection quality. Each stream takes Ygbps based on resolution, color space, and refresh rate. This is the factor that determines how many monitors can be driven from that a single DP port.
From the specs page:
"USB-C with DisplayPort 1.4 Alt-mode support; up to 8K @60Hz or 4K @120Hz, USB 3.2 Gen 2"
You mean different information? The fact that at that moment in time the Steam Deck would detect 2 monitors connected via a Dell USB C/Thunderbolt 3 dock and only display desktop on one is still a fact. Not misinformation.
But I tried myself with the official Steam Dock in Windows 10, and the DisplayPort monitor max resolution is 640x480.
I ended requesting a refund, and buying a USB C hub with 2 HDMI outputs, that works perfectly on both, Windows and Steam OS.
This one from Selore&S-Global: https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B09FXLZ1L3/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
It works with this one, but I guess that any hub with 2 HDMI outputs will work the same.
Not the ideal solution because cable management is much worse in this kind of hubs, but at least I can have 2 external monitors in Windows.
The Steam Deck isn't a Windows device to begin with, so I'm not that surprised, but for 99 euro I'd expect an USB-hub to be class-compliant.