USB-C dock display adapters (HDMI, DisplayPort) are generally seen as a preferable replacement for proprietary docking ports on old bulky laptops.
A symptom is USB-C adapter works on one laptop, but not on another almost identical laptop model.
For Apple hardware, USB-C docks might only work with DisplayPort connection, not HDMI.
This may be because some USB-C docks use “DisplayPort Alternate Mode”, which macOS seems not to recognize with an HDMI connection even on the same monitor that works with a DisplayPort cable connection.
General symptoms across hardware and operating systems include the dock display not being detected by the operating system, to showing a black screen, or very low resolution.
The solution seems to be to stick with expensive OEM display adapters, or at least long established brands.
The temptation of a cheap adapter can quickly turn to frustration or botched presentations.
Another thing to watch for is cheap adapters may fail intermittently when using more than one high bandwidth feature.
For example, using Gigabit Ethernet and HDMI on the cheap USB-C adapter simultaneously may fail intermittently during a conference call or teaching a class, which can be frustrating.
Some adapters that charge the laptop with a USB-C input for power may experience improper operations if the display adapter is plugged into the laptop while the USB-C power input is powered.
This problem may persist upon re-plugging the adapter to laptop and/or power cycling the monitor and laptop.
A workaround we’ve found is to unplug USB-C power input to the adapter, plug into the laptop with all the desired accessories, then finally plug USB-C power input into the adapter.
That is unexpected, but has worked for us sometimes.
Intel oneAPI is a cross-platform toolset that covers several programming languages including C, C++, Fortran and Python.
Intel oneAPI includes the C++ “icpx” compiler, Fortran “ifx” compiler, Intel MKL, and Intel MPI.
oneAPI is free-to-use and no login is required to download and install.
oneAPI can be installed via package manager or manually.
There are distinct usage patterns to access Intel oneAPI compilers on Windows vs. Linux.
Set environment variables CC, CXX, FC
via script.
oneapi-vars sets environment variable CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH so don’t just blindly overwrite that environment variable.
Windows requires Visual Studio Community to be installed first–VS IDE integration is optional.
For oneAPI ≥ 2025.3.1 and CMake ≥ 4.2, MSVC 2026 is supported.
Remarkably, oneAPI Windows on ARM installations work as well!
If VS IDE integration is installed,
cmake -G
can be used to
generate Visual Studio
project files with CMake 3.29 or newer.
Otherwise,
at least CMake 3.25.0
is adequate for oneAPI.
On Windows a Start menu shortcut for a oneAPI command prompt is installed.
Powershell can also use “oneapi-vars.bat” to set the environment variables as per the oneapi.ps1 in the Gist above.
If CMake Visual Studio generator is desired, ensure:
If problems with finding packages with oneAPI on Windows and CMake occur, ensure that MSYS2 paths aren’t mixed in with the oneAPI environment.
See the project
CMakeConfigureLog.yaml
and look for unwanted paths in the include commands.
On Linux, oneAPI requires
GNU GCC toolchain.
Some HPC systems have a too-old GCC version default for Intel oneAPI.
This can cause problems with C++ STL linking.
If needed, set environment variable CXXFLAGS for
Intel GCC toolchain
in custom “oneapi.sh” like:
The COMMENT field of CMake’s
add_custom_target()
is intended to print messages during the build.
However, this field is a no-op when using
CMake Generators
like Ninja and GNU Make.
To reliably print messages during the build regardless of the Generator used,
create a custom echo command using CMake’s built-in cmake -E echo functionality.
Major projects with CPU arch-specific code may distribute binaries for multiple CPU architectures for operating systems.
Apple Silicon or Microsoft Prism are key examples of emulated binaries.
Programs, especially computational programs like Anaconda Python should have the native matching CPU arch software installed.
Example code to programatically
check
if a C++, GNU Octave, Matlab, or Python executable on:
GoogleTest internally set
CMake compiler flags
are too aggressive for end users, and can cause build errors.
We experienced this with Intel oneAPI, and created a workaround for the GoogleTest-consuming CMake project to override the offending flags.
This technique is useful in general with third-party CMake projects, including those obtained by FetchContent.
For GoogleTest, we determined that Intel oneAPI was experiencing nuisance internal errors:
Windows “-WX” flag
Linux “-Werror” flag
We overrode those flags with this CMake script:
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest)if(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_IDSTREQUAL"IntelLLVM")foreach(tINITEMSgtestgtest_maingmockgmock_main)if(WIN32)# necessary since GoogleTest injects /WX blindly and that fails builds with modern IntelLLVM.
# https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/compiler-option-warning-level
target_compile_options(${t} PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:/WX->)else()# necessary to avoid
# error: unknown warning option '-Wno-implicit-float-size-conversion' [-Werror,-Wunknown-warning-option]
target_compile_options(${t} PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:-Wno-error=unknown-warning-option>)endif()endforeach()endif()
The override “/WX-” nullifies the
/WX flag
that errors for nuisance warnings internal to GoogleTest.
The “-Wno-” flag is the same as the underlying GCC compiler on Linux.
The 6 GHz Wi-Fi band is widely available in new hardware (routers and clients).
However, for economic reasons, many devices still omit the 6 GHz Wi-Fi band.
6 GHz Wi-Fi helps provide more data bandwidth on less congested RF spectrum, which is important for latency-sensitive applications like gaming and video conferencing.
While the ultimate connection quality can be achieved by wired Ethernet, practical considerations often lead to Wi-Fi being used even within the same room as the network router.
Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be)
MLO (Multi-Link Operation)
avoids connection hiccups between Wi-Fi bands because multiple available bands are used simultaneously for clients so capable.
A multi-radio router that has simultaneous MLO is a key feature to look for.
Typical contemporary mobile phones already have Wi-Fi 7 support.
Laptop support can be checked from the manufacturer.
Laptops with the Snapdragon X Elite CPU widely emerged in 2024.
Certain benchmarks show performance comparable with the Apple M3 CPU.
The Snapdragon X2 Elite CPU is available in laptops emerging in 2026, and surpasses the Apple M5 in some benchmarks.
Windows 11
24H2 added Prism
x86-64 emulation like
Rosetta on macOS
but tuned for Snapdragon X CPUs, offering significant performance improvements for x86-64 applications on ARM-based laptops.
CMake
--graphviz
can generate GraphViz target dependency graphsfor CMake-supported project code languages including C, C++, and Fortran.
Fortran executables and modules are shown in the directed dependency graph.
Generating the dependency graph requires CMake configure and generate.
Thus, the compiler and generator needed by the CMake project must be working.
The project does not need to be compiled before generating the dependency graph.
However, the user should select the same CMake configure options as they would for compiling the project.
Example:
MUMPS
dependency graph is below.
SVG vector graphics can be zoomed arbitrarily large in a web browser.
The “graphviz/” directory is to avoid making files in the source directory.
CMake build targets are declared by “add_[executable,library,custom_target]” commands.
Targets can be dynamically set by arbitrarily complex foreach(), if(), etc. logic.
A list of CMake targets in the directory scope is retrieved by the
BUILDSYSTEM_TARGETS
directory
property.
The variable “target_names” contains all the target names previously added in the CMakeLists.txt in the DIRECTORY scope.
Retrieving the list of targets in a whole project, or in a FetchContent dependency is possible with this CMake function:
function(print_targetsdir)get_property(subdirsDIRECTORY"${dir}"PROPERTYSUBDIRECTORIES)foreach(subINLISTSsubdirs)print_targets("${sub}")endforeach()get_directory_property(targetsDIRECTORY"${dir}"BUILDSYSTEM_TARGETS)if(targets)message("Targets in ${dir}:")foreach(tINLISTStargets)message(" • ${t}")endforeach()endif()endfunction()
Use this function like:
print_targets("${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}")
Or supposing FetchContent, here using “googletest”:
Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) uses
VHDX
files to store each distribution’s filesystem.
Over time these disk images grow in size as files are added and deleted.
However, the space used by deleted files is not automatically reclaimed, leading to larger disk images than necessary.
There is a
PowerShell script
to automatically compact WSL VHDX files that works with any of the Windows release levels (including Home).