Thenew USB Type-C connector works seamlessly with this Ultra HD 4K Universal Docking Station. It can connect to any host with Standard A or Type C connectors providing a fully backward-compatible and future proof docking solution.
Allow you to connect up to two additional monitors and eleven accessories through a single USB cable. Including the latest drivers for compatibility with Windows 10, 8.1 and 7 or Apple Mac OS,it features two DisplayPort or HDMI outputs for mirroring/extending your Windows desktop to external monitors, a Gigabit Ethernet port, audio input and output ports, and six USB 3.0 ports.
With broad compatibility and connectivity, DisplayLink can work with any device that has a USB port. Incredibly high quality video content on a 5K monitor from your laptop allows you to scale from huddle rooms to large-scale boardrooms, hassle-free.
Dock provides usb-c power delivery up to 65W maximum of upstream charging to compatible and also power to the others peripherals simultaneously with 100Watt Power Adapter, 40Watt power for all downstream devices(such as cell phone ). You can do anything you want without worrying Low-Power.
Note: Use PD Function, PC computer or laptop must with an available USB PD USB-C Port(Thunderbolt 3 compatible)
Does not support DisplayPort MST daisy-chain connections or Dual-Link DVI conversions. Does not support monitors with 1366x768 optimal resolutions.
Vizio M-Series 4K TVs are only compatible at 4K@30Hz. Not compatible with Acer G-Sync enabled monitors' DisplayPort port, like the Acer XB321HK.
USB 3.0 provides up to 5Gbps data transfer speeds, which is 10 times faster than USB 2.0. The item features 6 USB 3.0 ports, allowing for SuperSpeed data transfer between peripherals. ease of use of your laptop including mouse, keyboards, controllers, printers, external GPU and so much more! These ports are also compatible with USB 2.0.
*Bluetooth devices may cause network delays.
1, Since macOS High Sierra 10.13, the user has to explicitly enable this system extension in the Security & Privacy system preference after installation and before the DisplayLink software is allowed to run.
After chmod 700 on that .run file and running it, it installed some packages and asked me to create a password. It then rebooted and asked me for that same password. The two monitors (plus my laptop) started working.
I am from wavlink :)The device is not built with displaylink chip but the siliconmotion chip.Please kindly try to install the siliconmotion driver for ubuntu from the link below to check if this could help. this could help you.
Description
"Wavlink Brings Technology to Life
The new USB Type-C connector works seamlessly with this Ultra HD 4K Universal Docking Station. It can connect to any host with Standard A or Type C connectors providing a fully backward-compatible and future-proof docking station. Allow you to connect up to two additional monitors and twelve accessories through a single USB cable. Including the latest drivers for compatibility with Windows 10/8.1/7 or Mac OS
Designed Perfectly for You
With a single cable, the dock can free up space on your desk and in your workspace with the added ability to mount behind a monitor or on your desk. Great for presentations, the sleek Dock enables fast, efficient connectivity to multiple displays and all your various peripherals(like a mouse, keyboard or flash drive) through one convenient cable.
Sync-and-Charge USB-C Port
Come with a 100W power adapter, this usb c dock can charge your laptop up to 65W via the USB-C connector after firmware upgrading, as well as syncing data, photos and music.
5K@60Hz Output
14.7 million pixels give you amazing feast vision, showing every details clearly as like be personally on the scene. It also helps to improve operational efficiency on images and video editing.
Dual 4K@60Hz
Featuring the DisplayPort and HDMI port, Wavlink Docking Station gives you the flexibility to connect your displays as needed. It supports dual monitors or a single high resolution 4K monitor. It will greatly help you facilitate high-resolution works, graphically intensive images, video editing, CAD drawings, medical imagery and more.
Note
HDMI and DP ports in the area of Display1 or Display2, if they are connected to the monitor at the same time, DP will have the priority.
The new firmware has been upgraded to support MAXIMUM 65W to charge the upstream laptop. Please feel free to contact our technical support for more information."
With over 15 years of technology expertise, WAVLINK brand is rising rapidly in market of wireless network and comprehensive IT peripherals, which make things easier, smarter and more connected to people's life.
I just purchased a displaylink USB 3 based device; reading the forums I didn't pickup the difference between USB 2.0 being supported and USB 3.0 not being supported. This is nonsense. Content protection on the monitor, I don't care about being able to use protected content; I'd like to just be able to use the monitor I paid for. But no.
The Ubuntu driver is designed with open source components and packaging which enables it to be ported and distributed for other linux distros. DisplayLink does not intend to officially support more than Ubuntu. For more information, see our article here:
Now we have our first support for Android, we are pleased to announce that we will be extending our support for Linux, beyond USB 2.0 devices, with the first public preview for USB 3.0 devices planned in Q3 this year.
The Solution: DISPLAYLINK-DEBIAN by AdnanHodzic
-debian
The DisplayLink driver installer for Debian and Ubuntu based Linux distributions: Debian, Ubuntu, Elementary OS, Mint, Kali, Deepin and many more! Full list of all supported platforms
displaylink-debian allows seamless installation of the official DisplayLink drivers tailored to work for most of the Debian based Linux distributions regardless of which Linux kernel version (>4.15) you're using.
Hi, I have a centos 8 also I have Display link usb3.0 plung and play display adapter. But I could not find any driver for centos 8. The same device is working fine with ubuntu 18.04 but I need to use cetos 8, Do you have any driver for that ..
lenovo 700 / ubuntu 16lts
I'm lucky that it's a company pc - otherwise I would be pretty mad that I wasted money on a fancy usb hub.
When graphic ports (sometimes, but very rarely and in an undeterministic manner) work the graphics is horrbible with tons of artifacts showing at random. Even the jack port doesn't work.
Fedora 25 now detects and automatically configures the DisplayLink device on my computer at boot time. Right on the LiveDVD it will light up the monitor and then you will have to use the Displays control panel once you logon to arrange your monitors. I was pleasantly surprised because I have not been able to use this device on any Linux computer without severe problems with stability and an annoying, flickering mouse cursor.
At any rate, you then will have to copy your working monitors.xml to /etc/skel/.configure and also to /var/lib/gdm/.config/ in order to ensure consistency across the system because Xorg and Wayland still don't know how to arrange multiple monitors' ports correctly. Every time I end up with screen 3 as primary, with the DisplayLink device being set up as screen 2 (off to the right of screen 1) and the other identical monitor to the right of screen 3 as screen 1. They are always scrambled until I manually set the arrangement and save the configuration.
Unfortuately, if you enable acceleration options or TearFree on a Radeon card, it will then render the DisplayLink device inoperable again until you remove the xorg.conf file that configures those options for the Radeon card. Tried several configurations and nothing has so far worked. So, I just went back to the default auto-configuration. I don't do a whole lot on the Linux side these days any more so I guess I will worry about acceleration later.
Thank goodness I insisted on purchasing these USB hubs for testing by us before ordering for the whole company and our clients. Am currently testing other solutions and am sure we will have viable options before a working version of this hardware is available.
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DisplayLink devices on Linux still only have experimental support. While some people have had success in using them, it is generally not an easy process and not guaranteed to work. The steps on this page describe the generally most successful methods of using external monitors with DisplayLink.
This should work without any configuration changes on linux 4.14.9-1 and later. If you are using an earlier version of that package or have CONFIG_FB_UDL=m set in your kernel config, you need to blacklist the old kernel module, udlfb, which may attempt to load itself first.
A reboot may be required for the setting to be effective. After reboot, see if the Displaylink screens are displaying in your display settings. If not, continue on the next steps, which will attach the DVI-I inputs to your GPU.
In the above output, we can see that provider 0 is the system's regular graphics provider (Intel), and provider 1 (modesetting) is the DisplayLink provider. To use the DisplayLink device, connect provider 1 to provider 0:
and xrandr will add a DVI output you can use as normal with xrandr. This is still experimental but supports hotplugging and when works, it is by far the simplest setup. If it works then everything below is unnecessary.
If your DisplayLink device is connected, it should show some visual indication of this. Although a green screen is the standard indicator of this, other variations have been spotted and are perfectly normal. Most importantly, the output of dmesg should show something like the following, indicating a new DisplayLink device was found:
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