A dock that wakes up reliably

25 points | by ingve 2 hours ago

19 comments

  • golem14 20 minutes ago

    I think there's a solid case for someone to make a monitor with a working, built-in dock. I mean, many monitors already have USB-outs for keyboards and 2nd displays and such.

    I think monitors are a sweet spot - they tend to stick around longer than computers, and docks really don't need to change a lot over time, at least now with thunderbolt out there. Fewer cables, too.

    I like the idea of standalone docks, and I purchased a few, but none reliably worked for me.

  • ak217 22 minutes ago

    I use a bunch of Lenovo Thunderbolt docks, with both Macbooks and Thinkpads. The older models go for as little as $20 used nowadays. I had to update the firmware on the really old ones, but after that they work flawlessly and let me connect 2x4k60 monitors.

  • userbinator 24 minutes ago

    Thunderbolt/USB-C protocols are basically at the edge of what's electrically possible. If you look at Ethernet equipment that's roughly in the same speed range and notice how much it costs, it's clear there are heavy tradeoffs with the consumer stuff.

  • jolux an hour ago

    My experience with non-Apple Thunderbolt products has been pretty dicey across the board. My ASUS motherboard has a port and theoretically works with it but across several firmware, BIOS, and driver upgrades, I’ve never actually got it to successfully recognize my TS4 as a Thunderbolt device, only USB.

  • nashashmi an hour ago

    I use two different docks. Dock 1 is a cheap chinese dock with some ports that worked (it has many ports). Dock 2 is hp g2 (an expensive dock). Occasionally the screen shuts off and resumes a second later in the dock 1. And resuming from sleep, the laptop doesn’t detect the keyboard. I figured it was until the laptop is fully up, I should not plug in the usb. On dock 2, the laptop goes to sleep and won’t turn back on from the keyboard until I press the power button.

  • LennyHenrysNuts 29 minutes ago

    Never thought it could be the monitor. I have an HP dock with an HP laptop for work and it's totally unreliable waking from sleep.

    My chances of getting new monitors are slim in this climate but it's a new avenue of investigation at least.

      Lord_Zero 21 minutes ago

      Yeah and the author linked a $1100 monitor lmao

  • erdaltoprak 19 minutes ago

    My OWC Thunderbolt Pro dock is still the most feature packed one with 10g and good heat dissipation

  • hinkley an hour ago

    I had the first generation Anker TB2 doc and that was the first time I ever saw them produce a product that was a dud.

    They sent me a replacement and I had the same problems. Then found out it was a design problem not a manufacturing one. They could send me 10 more and they would still not wake up all the ports properly. I don't even recall now what series of ritual steps I took to wake it up. I think unplugging it completely from everything. Which is actually more cable wear than not having a dock.

  • hankbond an hour ago

    Please take this gently, but I did not really walk away from this post having gained anything. I don't have any problems with the post in isolation but I just don't feel it really offers enough weight to be here if that makes sense.

    I read a few of your other posts and your writing style is direct and pleasant in a way I appreciate. Thank you for actually writing things.

      nickelpro 26 minutes ago

      OP is not the author.

      Fabien Sanglard's HN handle is fabiensanglard

      TrainedMonkey an hour ago

      The author does not call it out, but I think the point is that it's not only the dock. I've been struggling with MBP wakeup issues for a while. We have a whole zoo of various apple devices attached to a number of docks. All of the monitors are Odyssey Neo G9. TL:DR an issue with MBP port, MBP to Dock link, Dock, Dock to Monitor link, or the monitor itself could cause the unplugging dance.

      In addition, it takes some time for Apple to squash bugs after releasing new hardware or software. M5s used to be unreliable with Anker TB4 until 1-2 months ago.

        bombcar an hour ago

        Us old people have the idea of peripherals as input (keyboard, mouse) or output (monitor, printer) - but they've all been input/output for two decades or more; and Thunderbolt and friends are much more like an Ethernet network (reliability of Wake on LAN, anyone?) than they are simple point-to-point connections.

        Meaning - anything could be the device preventing what you expect to happen, even if it looks like it should be impossible and have nothing to do with it.

      nashashmi an hour ago

      I’m hoping the comments will have a better insight into what’s happening

      TacticalCoder 38 minutes ago

      > I did not really walk away from this post having gained anything

      Then my comment won't help you much: since I swapped my MacBook Air M1's 27" monitor for a 34" one from the same brand, it's only been the exact clusterfuck of unreliable "wake up not working properly anymore" for no friggin' reason. Except in my case it was working fine, and now it's not anymore.

  • turtleyacht 40 minutes ago

    Switching the monitor worked. Wonder if an HDMI dummy plug, a virtual monitor emulator, would have helped.

  • matt_daemon an hour ago

    Anyone know what that keyboard is?

  • dominotw an hour ago

    > ASUS ROG Swift (PG27UCDM)

    any benefits in coding and reading hackernews