![]() ![]() Needless to say, I have tried the standard things, like various resets etc. It seems similar issues are common, but I have not yet found a common explanation to fix these things. Is this a software issue with High Sierra? Are the two monitors "incompatible" for some reason? I see no reason why the flickering happens. Any thoughts I don't want to arrange my second monitor below my first because that's confusing and. I am going to try another MacBook Pro (same model) this week, and will report back. I am looking for a way to move my dock to my second monitor but not my menu bar. I have also tried another AOC (same model) monitor together with the BenQ, and it still flickers. ![]() I have tried different cables, and the issue persists. I have also used a Satechi slim multiport (as a very simple docking station), and I see the same flickering behavior. However, I only see flickering when two monitors are connected at once. Also, it is random which port is involved in the flicker. It seems random which monitor flickers sometime it is the BenQ, other times it is the AOC. The docking station provides power to the Mac. The BenQ is then connected to the remaining Thunderbolt 3 port on my Mac via a HDMI-USB-C adapter. The AOC monitor is connected directly to the docking with DisplayPort. The docking station connects to the MacBook via a thunderbolt 3 cable. I am using the following to connect these monitors to my Mac: ![]() I have a dual monitor set up at work with my MacBook Pro 13" 2017 (two thunderbolt 3 ports). Sometimes it happens when I am not doing anything on that monitor, and sometimes it seems like it is triggered when pixels change on the monitor (opening something, or even just moving the mouse cursor) the screen gets completely black for a split second (sometimes a few seconds) and it goes back on. The nature of the flicker is "on/off", i.e. Apps that are in full screen or Split View, and desktop spaces you created, are shown as thumbnails in the Spaces bar along the top edge of the screen.I am experiencing flickering with my dual monitor setup. Mission Control shows all of the windows open on the desktop of your Mac, arranged in a single layer so it’s easy to spot the one you need. Well yes, that's basically how it does in fact work. There are solutions all over the internet telling you that all you have to do is move the mouse down on the bottom of your monitor, and the dock will be summoned. These spaces will help you to organize your activities by providing more space (well, virtual space anyway) to work with than is available on your physical display. Now try the gesture on both your primary monitor, and over the bottom edge of the null space on your second monitor. Spaces (introduced as part of Mission Control since OS X 10.7 “Lion”) allows you to spread your programs across up to 16 separate desktop areas. However, if this happens to you, there are two methods to deal with it. ![]() I’m not sure why and could find no discernible patter to this behavior. However, sometimes the Dock would wander off the Studio Display and onto the MacBook Pro laptop. With my work set-up I have the Studio Display as my main display with the laptop as an extended display. The Dock is, of course, a utility on the Mac desktop that provides a convenient place to access apps and features that you’re likely to use every day. There’s no great solution, but there are a couple of workarounds. After attaching an Apple Studio Display to my 16-inch MacBook Pro, I found that the Dock wouldn’t stay in place. ![]()
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