
I have seen on a Display Port web page, what looked like an adapter with display port one side and HDMI the other, does this exist as it seems better than the DVI to HDMI approach. (The 13-inch Touch Bar model, which starts. All current MBP models have 1 FireWire 800 located on the left side between the Thunderbolt and the Ethernet ports. I have read that you have to use an adapter then plug that into a cable with DVI on one end and HDMI on the other and then use a "y" cable for the audio plugged into your amp for sound. It has just two USB Type-C/Thunderbolt 3 connectors on the left edge, and a single audio jack on the right edge. (59,960 points) 7:23 AM in response to bigrye. I don't know if that's since changed on the new models. However, the audio is only passed through if the PC supports HDMI signaling, which I believe the 2009 Macbooks didn't. From what I've read it is also known as DP++ and it passes the signal straight through as HDMI with the use of an adapter. Up to six devices can be daisy-chained from one port, and since Thunderbolt is based on PCI Express, it can even support FireWire and USB adapters. If your MacBook Pro is still running with only the stock RAM, upgrading will provide a dramatic performance boost. Memory: The MacBook Pro 13' Unibody Early 2011 comes with 4 GB RAM standard, and accepts a maximum of 16 GB. I have done some reading on the mini display port and it's computability with HDMI. There are a number of components in the MacBook Pro 13' Unibody Early 2011 that can be cost effectively upgraded.

I am about to buy a 2011 13" Macbook Pro.
