Obeto

The AbsolutelyJohn Startech.com Thunderbolt 3 Docking Station for Laptops Review

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London, Ontario-based Startech.com is well known, and rather celebrated for their line of hard drive docks, which, unlike most of the swill out there, are extremely reliable.

In fact, I had 4 hard drive docks here at The Orbiting O’Odua before I snagged this review opportunity….

….which is rather fortuitous because I have two lappers here that can take advantage of the dock.

One of the things we all run into right quick, is screen space on our laptops.

Though I have the privilege of using two of the three best laptops in existence*, I always find myself needing more screen space with all the productivity applications I have opened.

Unfortunately, all of the desktop docks I had sampled or tested were found wanting. The most egregious of them always caused a BSOD/STOP event whenever I undocked a lapper! Moreover, they all were HD devices, barely able to drive my 2560x1600 HP ZR30w monitor.

Not good. Not good at all.

Into this breach, comes the Startech Thunderbolt 3 Dock.

Startech.com Thunderbolt 3 Docking Station for Laptops – Win & Mac**

The unit here, is feature-packed.

It sports, a USB-C port, count them – SIX – USB 3.0 ports with power delivery, an SD slot, A DisplayPort, and an ethernet port!

A true dock, if you will.

Let’s plunge in.

O.O.B.E.

Sometimes, a bad unboxing, or OOBE (Out-Of-the-Box-Experience) is a portend of disaster.

In fact, rarely is a bad OOBE not followed by a bad product, or user experience.

The OOBE for the Startech Dock was very good.

I cracked open the seals on the package, and found the surprisingly diminutive dock safely nestled in the box. Good.

What was included in the package took it away: in addition to the power supply cable, there was a USB-C cable, there was also a USB-C charging cable, a USB-c-to-DisplayPort cable, and an international (I’m assuming Canada) power supply.

Everything I needed.

Again, cool.

Test Setup

I basically used the same monitors for both tests: two Dell 4K monitors, and my trusty old HP ZR30w monitor. I also used the beta 4K monitor I am testing here from time to time. I also connected it to a projector driving a 125” screen.

Test devices were an Apple MacBook Pro, and a Dell XPS15.

Testing the Startech Thunderbolt 3 Docking Station

Dell XPS15

Connect, and go. Fini.

That’s it.

No software to be loaded, no (included) manual to peruse. Just connect-and-go.

I had zero connection and config issues. The dock drove both monitors seamlessly, only needing me to ID and set monitor positions in order to reach my optimal workflow.

I could drag and position any application on whatever screen I wanted to without fuss, and they all moved snappily.

One of my buddy Markham’s pet peeves with PC laptops and external monitors is that removing them from the monitor(s) almost always causes a STOP event. As opposed to when he does the same without errors on his Macbook Pro.

While I know this isn’t an apples-to-apples comparison – pun, but using the Thunderbolt 3 dock as an interlocutor produced zero STOP events or errors with the Dell XPS15.

Finally, I use it to display media on a projected screen that I, in turn, broadcast to my staff. Pretty kewl, of me! 😉

Apple Macbook Pro

This past Christmas, I scored a Macbook Pro which I have so far used sparingly. Primarily because it has that smallish – compared to the XPS15 screen, and because I am me, and it is not Windows!

However, I use it for quickie email triage and troffing off emails where brevity is needed.

It is though, a perfect platform to test the Startech.com Thunderbolt 3 Dock on.

It worked. Perfectly.

What I liked about it was that with the MBP, I just used the two 4K screens, not even looking at that weak play Apple called the MBP screen.

Microsoft Office is the app, and I found myself able to do more on MBP when docked than I have been able to do since December 25 of last year!

I max’d out the USB 3.0 slots on the device with external hard drives, and no worries.

Everything worked.

I am thinking of amp’ing up the ante by ordering up a LaCie Thunderbolt 3 external hard drive just to test performance***. Maybe portable external SSDs, it there’s such a thing.

Conclusions

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I must confess that I generally put peripheral devices in the “Someday, Sometime” category, for reviews.

Why?

Because there are so many of them across several usage scenarios.

However, this is different.

I used it entirely in a business environment to great success. Secondarily, I was able to use it to consume Netflix and Amazon Prime Video consumer content.

The flicker-free video and zero-latency mouse movements need to be seen to be believed, and everything just works out of the box.

This is, without a doubt, the most able peripheral device I have attached to a computer in a very long time. it is immediately useful; has the most pleasant OOBE – ‘featureless install’, included cables; and the user experience for connected devices is superb.

Resultantly, we are bestowing the SmallBizWindows Business Ready Award of Excellence on the Startech.com Thunderbolt 3 Docking Station for Windows & Macs.

I look forward to other scenarios, and to testing other good stuff from Startech.

-John

*The top 3 laptops commercially available are the Dell XPS15 – in all models, especially the one with the 4K screen, the Dell XPS13, and Apple Macbook Pro. We have tested them. We have reviewed them. We have placed several hundred of the first two devices to great success, so you won’t waste your time replication it. You’re welcome.

**Somebody at Startech.com needs to quit going full IBM in product nomenclature!

***If I do so, I will post an update to this review detailing my experience.

© 2002 – 2018, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The Incredibly ‘Hot Mess’ that is the Microsoft News app

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This is something I didn’t see coming!

For one thing, Microsoft is not known as a company which creates upgrades that completely mess things up further. Which makes the new Microsoft News app even sadder.

If you overlook the one-time misstep that was Windows Vista, you really wonder how Microsoft got here.

For years, especially since Windows 8 dropped, the MSN News app plodded along.

The app was never improved upon. Not  a single iota.

Even the basics people want in their news apps, weren’t there: customizations were not possible, news sources were limited, and the UI sucked major.

However, there were two things the app excelled in: it was relatively quick, and no matter what the prevailing thought of the day was, the news was laid out chronologically.

Over the years, it became quite useless, and most folks moved away from it.

However, it was sorta crammed down your throat when you initiated a new Windows ‘X’ install, and also when you used any Microsoft property in iOS. After a while, you got completely worn out by the nag screens asking you to install the News and companion MSN Sports app, that you basically capitulated.

I actually liked the Sports app because it was about the only app that would bring me timely Formula 1 news. Apart from that, it was rather useless for every other sport. Or, I didn’t even try after version 1; I don’t remember which….

My greatest pet peeve with this app was that it would neither let you select news sources, nor let you block and/or deprecate news sources.

What good is that?

Worse yet, you couldn’t even make the minor customizations allowed without creating a Microsoft Account, signing in to MSN.com from a [desktop] browser, and making customizations there. Which would then be propagated to all devices and apps linked to your Microsoft account.

Yes, some Redmondian Mensa came up with this merde!

Totally, uncharacteristic for Microsoft, if we discount the one-time swill called Windows ME.

Since Microsoft is integral to my business life, I had to dogfood it, so to speak.

So, with apps like Apple’s formerly excellent News, and Flipboard, I was able to endure.

Sadly, Flipboard removed their little news age notification, so I don’t know, at-a-glance, how old the proffered news tidbit is without reading the entire article. And iOS News app has resorted to some algorithmic kaka in order to bring you Siri “AI-powered” news. Moreover, on my ipad, iOS News seems to trail my iPhone in synching/updating the news. Crazy, right?

Aaaah! I almost forgot my 3rd pet peeve with the old MSN News app: you can’s select an news article for sharing without opening up the story.

And since I’m here: 4th peeve: you cannot dislike any story. 5thpeeve: you cannot dislike, downvote, or block a story topic.

Yes: why bother [with it], right?

Well, I still maintain that this is very unlike Microsoft, especially if we ignore the abominable Windows 8.

A week or so ago, Microsoft fanboy sites started shillin’ about the Microsoft News app which was going to replace the MSN App.

I took the bait, and installed it on two iOS devices: an iPad and an iPhone.

Incredibly, this product has gotten worse!

Wow!

Where can I start?

  • It now has ads embedded into everything, completely FUBAR’ing your reading experience. I am talking about ads at the top, the middle, and everywhere else within a story!
  • It is no longer chronological, with stories coming at you from whenever.
  • You still cannot select a landing tab without signing it.
  • You still cannot restrict news sources.
  • You still cannot block or deprecate a news topic.
  • You still cannot select your desired news sources.
  • It now has infinite scrolling! Either in the headlines, or after a story!

The graphics are blocky, and all over, sadly, eerily, and scarily reminiscent of the Duplo-esque UI that was the failed Windows Phone/Windows Mobile debacle!

People, this is Windows 98 all over again!

If this, after a decade or more, is the best Microserfs can do, I shudder.

© 2002 – 2018, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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