![]() You get the same usable screen space as a standard 1080p display, just with sharper images and text.” “The Mac detected the display, noticed that it was 4K, and without any extra cajoling began displaying in HiDPI mode. “Despite what Apple’s spec page currently says, connecting the 2015 Air to the P2415Q worked perfectly,” Cunningham reports. “Last year’s Air connected to the same display with the same cable can manage, at best, a blurry 2560×1440.” The short answer is that yes, both the Pros and Airs now support 4K output at 60Hz using a single DisplayPort 1.2 cable,” Cunningham reports. “We were fairly sure that Apple’s spec page was incorrect, but to get a definitive answer we dove into the still-nascent 4K display ecosystem to do some testing. “But in the last few days a number of readers have pointed out that Apple’s tech specs page for the new MacBook Airs claims a maximum resolution of 2560×1600. In our head-to-head comparison of the two systems, we did it again,” Andrew Cunningham reports for Ars Technica. “When the new MacBook Pros and Airs were announced, we reported that both systems were capable of driving 4K displays at a refresh rate of 60Hz.
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