Framework's 16-inch modular laptop uses six user-swappable expansion card slots instead of fixed ports, letting owners choose their own connectivity mix. Two of the six slots (positions 1 and 4) support USB4 at 40 Gbps with DisplayPort Alt Mode; the remaining four slots support USB 3.2 Gen 2. The AMD Ryzen 7040 platform does not support Thunderbolt. A representative standard configuration includes two USB-C, two USB-A, one HDMI, and one MicroSD expansion card.
Fujifilm's photography-focused APS-C flagship delivers 40.2MP resolution with in-body stabilization and a three-way tilting screen that prioritizes stills ergonomics over video features. The Micro HDMI (Type D) port provides clean 4K output for external recording, while the USB-C port runs at full USB 3.2 Gen 2 speed (10Gbps) for fast tethering and in-camera charging. Notable omission: there's no headphone jack — Fujifilm includes a USB audio adapter in the box for monitoring, which ties up the USB-C port. A 3.5mm stereo mic input is the only dedicated audio connector.
Fujifilm's sixth-generation fixed-lens compact packs the same 40.2MP X-Trans sensor and IBIS system from the X-T5 into a legendary rangefinder-style body with a 23mm f/2 lens. Connectivity is minimal by design — a Micro HDMI (Type D) port handles external video output, and a single USB-C port (USB 3.2 Gen 2, 10Gbps) manages data transfer and charging. There's no headphone jack and no dedicated 3.5mm mic input — a 2.5mm combo port doubles as mic input and remote shutter release. This camera prioritizes shooting simplicity over elaborate connectivity.
This is the world's first gaming monitor with a full-bandwidth DisplayPort 2.1 UHBR20 input, delivering uncompressed 4K at 240Hz over a single cable. A Mini DisplayPort 2.1 input doubles the DP 2.1 connectivity options, while two HDMI 2.1 ports cover console gaming. The USB-C port adds 65W Power Delivery with DP Alt Mode for laptop users who want single-cable convenience. A DisplayPort output enables daisy-chaining to a second display.
A 27-inch 1440p 240Hz IPS gaming monitor with a KVM switch and a surprise: USB-C input with DP Alt Mode. That USB-C only delivers 18W though, so it will keep a phone topped up but won't charge a laptop — plan a separate power brick. Two HDMI 2.0 ports and DisplayPort 1.4 cover console and PC sources. 3-port USB hub includes a USB-B upstream for KVM.
This 32-inch IPS panel delivers 4K at 144Hz for PC gaming and 120Hz over HDMI 2.1 for consoles, all at a competitive price point. The USB-C port supports DisplayPort 1.4 Alt Mode with 18W of power delivery, enough for phones but not laptops. A built-in KVM switch paired with the USB hub lets you control two systems from one keyboard and mouse. Three downstream USB 3.0 ports and a headphone jack complete a practical connectivity package.
Google's budget-friendly Pixel 8a uses a USB-C 2.0 port for charging and data, with 18W Power Delivery support keeping charge times modest but reliable. DisplayPort Alt Mode was enabled via a software update, allowing wired screen mirroring to external displays over USB-C. Data transfer speeds are limited to 480 Mbps over USB 2.0 despite the video output capability. The headphone jack is absent, so a USB-C to 3.5mm adapter or Bluetooth headphones are needed for wired audio.
Google's standard Pixel 9 features a USB-C 2.0 port that supports DisplayPort Alt Mode for screen mirroring to external displays straight out of the box. Charging tops out at 27W with a compatible USB-C PD charger, reaching about 55% in 30 minutes. Despite the USB 2.0 data speed limitation of 480 Mbps, the video output works well for presentations and media playback on big screens. No headphone jack is present, so a USB-C adapter or Bluetooth earbuds are required.
Google's largest Pixel 9 variant packs a USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port with DisplayPort Alt Mode for wired output to any external display. Fast charging hits 37W but demands a PPS charger delivering 18V — not every USB-C charger will reach full speed. Screen mirroring works out of the box over a simple USB-C to HDMI cable or adapter. No headphone jack is included, so a USB-C audio dongle or wireless headphones are essential.
Google's first set-top box with built-in Gigabit Ethernet and HDMI 2.1 connectivity. Delivers 4K@60Hz output (18Gbps bandwidth) with Quick Media Switching support, USB-C for power and optional 2.5Gbps ethernet, plus Matter/Thread hub functionality. Requires external HDMI cable (not included) and supports Dolby Vision, HDR10+, and native Dolby Atmos decoding.
A portable RGB tri-laser projector punching at home-theater brightness (2200 ISO lumens) with a 1920-lumen spec for reference. One of the two HDMI ports is full HDMI 2.1 for 4K 120Hz gaming and Dolby Vision, while the other is HDMI 2.0 with eARC to route Atmos to a soundbar. Optical TOSLINK and a 3.5mm jack cover the legacy audio paths. USB-A ports handle flash drives and external players.
This ultra-short-throw laser projector delivers 3,000 ANSI lumens with triple RGB laser technology and covers 110% of the BT.2020 color space. Two HDMI 2.1 ports with ALLM handle 4K gaming at up to 240Hz, and the third HDMI 2.0 port provides eARC for lossless audio passthrough to a soundbar. Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, HDR10+, and IMAX Enhanced certification make it a full home theater replacement. The Designed for Xbox badge confirms its gaming credentials with low-latency optimizations.
This 65-inch Mini-LED ULED pairs 3,000 nits peak brightness with over 2,000 dimming zones, making it competitive in gaming and bright-room HDR. Two HDMI 2.1 ports hit 4K@120Hz with VRR, but the other two cap out at 4K@60Hz — plan your source placement wisely. eARC runs on HDMI 1 for lossless audio return to a soundbar. For the 2.1 ports, use Ultra High Speed HDMI cables — standard cables top out at 18Gbps. Here's every port and the cables you'll need.
This business-class tower packs a generous 13 USB ports across its front and rear panels, including a front USB-C at 20Gbps for fast data transfers. Two rear DisplayPort 1.4a outputs handle dual 4K@60Hz monitors out of the box with integrated Intel UHD graphics. The configurable Flex I/O bay lets IT teams add extra video, Thunderbolt 3, or legacy serial ports to match department needs. Gigabit Ethernet and optional Wi-Fi 6E round out connectivity for enterprise deployments.
A thin 14-inch business laptop built on Intel Core Ultra, the EliteBook 840 G11 packs two Thunderbolt 4 ports with DisplayPort 2.1 support alongside HDMI 2.1 for direct monitor connections. Both USB-A ports run at USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) and support power charging for accessories. Unlike many consumer laptops, an optional smart card reader is available for enterprise authentication. No SD card reader is included on any configuration.
HP's premium convertible squeezes two Thunderbolt 4 ports, full-size HDMI 2.1, and USB-A on both sides into its rotating hinge. The native HDMI 2.1 drives 4K@60Hz without eating Thunderbolt bandwidth, and both TB4 ports handle independent 40Gbps displays with daisy-chaining. Power Delivery reaches 96W through either port while sustaining external video. Below is the complete port list.
HP's premium 16-inch 2-in-1 convertible arrives with two Thunderbolt 4 ports — one on each angled rear corner — plus a full HDMI 2.1 output unique to the 16-inch model. Both Thunderbolt 4 ports support DisplayPort Alt Mode and up to 100W Power Delivery for charging. A microSD card reader handles memory cards without needing an adapter. The single USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 port on the left accommodates older peripherals alongside the modern USB-C ecosystem.
A 27-inch 4K business docking display built around a 100W USB-C connection. One cable runs video, a full 4-port USB hub, a gigabit Ethernet passthrough, and enough power to charge most 15-inch laptops. DisplayPort 1.4 input and DisplayPort 1.4 output let you daisy-chain a second 4K monitor off the same laptop. HDMI 2.0 rounds out inputs for a console or desktop tower.
JBL's flagship 11.1.4-channel system ships with detachable wireless rear surround speakers and a 10-inch subwoofer. Three HDMI 2.0b inputs accept source devices with 4K Dolby Vision passthrough — but at 18 Gbps bandwidth, there is no 4K 120Hz gaming passthrough. The eARC output delivers uncompressed Dolby Atmos to the soundbar from your TV's apps. An Ethernet port provides reliable wired networking alongside Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.
JMGO's compact gimbal-mounted 4K portable projector uses a triple RGB laser engine with 1,100 ISO lumens and Google TV. Its two HDMI 2.1-labeled ports lack FRL support, so effective bandwidth tops out at 18 Gbps (4K@60Hz) — the 240Hz figure is internal MEMC, not HDMI input. HDMI 2 carries eARC, there's one USB 2.0 Type-A for media playback, and a 3.5mm analog output. Power uses an external DC brick, so no IEC inlet is present.
The Kensington SD5780T is an 11-port Thunderbolt 4 dock with a notable specification advantage: HDMI 2.1 output (capable of 4K@120Hz and VRR) and 2.5 Gbps Ethernet — both uncommon on docks at launch. It provides 96W of power to the laptop and has three Thunderbolt 4 ports total for flexible peripheral and display expansion. The UHS-II SD card reader and front-panel USB-A charging port (5V/1.5A) add everyday convenience. Note that MacBooks with Apple's base M-series chips (non-Pro/Max) are limited to a single external display through this dock regardless of port count.
Lenovo's 7-inch handheld combines dual USB-C—USB4 at 40Gbps and USB 3.2 at 10Gbps—for parallel charging and external display output. The left port handles video at up to 60Hz on 4K external screens, while the right supports 50W Power Delivery charging simultaneously. The UHS-II microSD reader is faster than most competitors, and the 3.5mm jack stays out of the way. Here's every port and the cables you'll need.
The second-generation Legion Go keeps twin USB4 40 Gbps USB-C ports but upgrades to DisplayPort 2.1 for higher-refresh external displays, and adds a 3.5mm headset jack absent from the original. Both ports support 100W USB PD and external display output — one handles a dock or eGPU while the other supplies power. Like its predecessor, there is no official Thunderbolt 4 certification, but USB4 eGPU enclosures are confirmed compatible. The 74Wh battery makes the 100W PD charge rate genuinely useful.
Lenovo's second-gen Legion Go keeps dual USB-C with USB4 on left (40Gbps) and USB 3.2 on right (10Gbps) for simultaneous charging and video. The 8.8-inch LCD screen is sharper than the original at the same brightness, and both ports support DisplayPort Alt Mode for external displays. The UHS-II microSD reader handles rapid game installs without USB bottlenecks. Below is the complete port list.