![]() ![]() It’s made from plastic, but it has a solid, sturdy feel to it. In fact, it has nearly identical dimensions at 4×4 inches and 1.5 inches high. It’s sleek and compact and has a minimalistic look to it, somewhat reminiscent of an AppleTV. You’ll need to purchase a docking station mount, as it’s not included. This allows you to mount the dock on the back of your monitor, thus reducing the clutter on your desk. The bottom of the Nano Dock has the holes for mounting to any 75mm or 100mm VESA compatible external display. There’s also a place to plug-in the power supply and the Thunderbolt 3 connector for connecting to the host computer. The two full-sized display ports support either dual 4k monitors (4096×2160 60 Hz) or a single 5k monitor (5120×2880 60 Hz). The gigabit ethernet port is for a 1 Gbps wired networking connection. The majority of the ports are on the back of this gadget. The right side of the Nano Dock has a power button. The USB 3.1 port is handy for charging a phone or a tablet or connecting a thumb drive. The USB-C port is data only-this means you can’t use it to power a monitor-so it’s for things like plugging in an external hard drive for a data backup. The front of the Nano Dock has three ports. Make sure that you’re connecting the Nano Dock to a Thunderbolt 3, because this is how you get the blistering 40 Gbs throughput. It works with both Windows and macOS computers. The Nano Dock connects to the host computer via Thunderbolt 3 (that’s the underlying connectivity standard) using USB-C (that’s the connector type). Everything (except for one minor detail that I learned) is pretty straightforward. There are no actual instructions on how to setup or use the dock, but it doesn’t really any. ![]() A quick start guide with 7 pages of images. ![]()
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