Late 2014 iMac - use as screen

Hi


I've seen a previous answer to my question but wondering whether there's any new advice out here because my iMac Screen is just sitting here not being used when there's nothing wrong with it


I have a 2021 M1 Pro MacBook which I use but would like to utilise the bigger 27" iMac screen


I understand Apple turned off the ability to do this way back in 2013 or there abouts


I'm hoping someone has now found a genius way of using the iMac as a second screen to another device like my MacBook Pro


Please, does anyone know if this is now possible? I can't believe Apple still doesn't want users to utilise more than one screen in a working environment?


Thank you

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 15.0

Posted on Oct 21, 2025 12:45 PM

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Posted on Oct 21, 2025 1:22 PM

There is a workaround product called Luna Display, but even if you run a cable between the two Macs to help carry data, the connection will NOT be as good as one to a real monitor.


The Astropad site itself says that Luna Display is not recommended for high motion content applications like video editing or gaming, and that there may be lags and artifacts.

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Oct 21, 2025 1:22 PM in response to CGJ64

There is a workaround product called Luna Display, but even if you run a cable between the two Macs to help carry data, the connection will NOT be as good as one to a real monitor.


The Astropad site itself says that Luna Display is not recommended for high motion content applications like video editing or gaming, and that there may be lags and artifacts.

Oct 21, 2025 1:28 PM in response to CGJ64

Re: “I can't believe Apple still doesn't want users to utilise more than one screen in a working environment?”


How did you come to that conclusion? A M1 Pro MacBook Pro can drive two external monitors at the same time as the built-in screen. Apple even sells a 27” 5K Studio Display with a screen similar to the one that your iMac had. (Although given the way they priced it, many people settle for lesser but cheaper third-party 4K displays.)

Oct 21, 2025 1:50 PM in response to Servant of Cats

I meant in the sense that the money forked out to buy their quality devices for some of means longevity of use is highly sought


I can't even use it for Lightroom because they need OS 13 whilst the iMac has no further updates to the 11 currently in place


I guess I'm going to have to chuck it


Any advice on what type of 4k Monitors I would need? How best to connect them?


Thank you so much

Oct 21, 2025 3:20 PM in response to CGJ64

CGJ64 wrote:

I meant in the sense that the money forked out to buy their quality devices for some of means longevity of use is highly sought


A Late 2014 iMac would be about 11 years old now. That's pretty old in computer terms.


That Mac originally ran Yosemite – and the end of the line for it is Big Sur. So it received six new major macOS versions. Big Sur is not one of the "most recent three" supported by vendors like Microsoft Adobe. It stopped being in that group two years ago, when Sonoma came out. It is still enough to run current versions of


Any advice on what type of 4k Monitors I would need? How best to connect them?


Just about any monitor will work with the MacBook Pro, but I would suggest looking for one that has

  • An IPS panel (so that if you view the monitor at an angle, there aren't huge color shifts)
  • 100% or near-100% coverage of sRGB. If the manufacturer does not include sRGB coverage in their technical specifications, this is usually a sign that the monitor's basic color accuracy is not very goodl
  • Optional: 100% or near-100% coverage of wide gamuts: DCI-P3 and Adobe RGB. (These overlap but are not the same. DCI-P3 is from the motion picture / 4K TV world, while Adobe RGB is from the print publishing one.)
  • Modern inputs: one of more of DisplayPort, HDMI, or USB-C (DisplayPort). Many monitors offer two (or more) inputs of at least two different kinds. If a monitor supports USB-C input, a single cable can often carry video to the monitor, carry charging power to the computer, and hook up monitor hub ports at the same time.

Late 2014 iMac - use as screen

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