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by vially 1506 days ago
According to the official documentation [1], the 13" M1 MacBook Pro also has this limitation:

  > If you're using a Mac with the M1 chip:
  > 
  > On iMac, Mac mini, MacBook Air, and 13-inch MacBook Pro, you can connect one external display using either of the Thunderbolt / USB 4 ports.
[1] - https://support.apple.com/en-afri/HT202351
2 comments

To be fair, several of my work laptops had a similar sentence in their user handbook, but two monitors were possible if you connected the wires before booting the laptop.

Really strange limitation, as it never scaled with bandwidth - so 4k 90+Hz was doable, but 2x 1080p60hz wasn't.

Some intel laptops (Ivybridge chips definitely, sandy Bridge probably) had such warnings because officially the chip couldn't support running three displays due lacking enough clock generators. Given the almost-analog nature of HDMI and naive LVDS, this meant trouble.

Thing is, Display Port has much more different physical layer derived from PCIE, and so connecting two displays by DP and running internal screen with LVDS worked just fine.

Well, the 13” M1 MacBook Pro is basically the Air with a fan and more ports?
Yep, though that's really more of a question of chip: the M1 only supports two displays, for the laptop that includes the internal one (the Mini only supports two displays, and one only 4K via HDMI).