A good dual monitor setup can make work much easier. You can write a document on one screen while checking research on another, or join a video meeting while viewing notes, spreadsheets, or project tools.

But many users run into the same issue: both monitors show the same thing instead of different content. This usually happens because the system is in duplicate mode, or because the user is using an HDMI splitter that does not support extended desktop output.
This guide explains how to set up two monitors, the difference between duplicate vs extend display, whether an HDMI splitter for dual monitors can show different things, and when you need a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter, docking station, or HDMI matrix switch.
Can Two Monitors Show Different Things?
Yes. Two monitors can show different things, but your computer and connection device must support extended display.
In extended display mode, the two monitors are recognized as separate screens. You can move different windows to different displays.
For example:
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One screen shows a document, while the other shows a browser.
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One screen shows a video meeting, while the other shows meeting notes.
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One screen shows an editing timeline, while the other shows preview footage.
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One screen shows code, while the other shows debugging tools.
If both monitors show the same content, your system is probably using duplicate display mode. This is useful for presentations, but it is not ideal for multitasking.
To make two monitors show different things, you need to enable extend mode and make sure your adapter, dock, or graphics output supports independent displays.
Duplicate vs Extend Display: What’s the Difference?
In a dual monitor setup, duplicate and extend are the two most important display modes.
| Mode | What It Does | Best For |
| Duplicate display | Shows the same content on both screens | Presentations, classrooms, projector use |
| Extend display | Shows different content on each screen | Office work, multitasking, editing, design, trading, development |
Duplicate display copies the same image to both monitors. For example, your laptop screen and external monitor show the same desktop.
Extend display turns the second monitor into extra desktop space. You can move windows between screens and use each display for different tasks.

If your goal is productivity, you usually want extend display, not duplicate display.
How to Set Up Two Monitors on One Computer
Before connecting two monitors, check whether your computer supports multiple video outputs.
Common connection options include:
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One HDMI port plus one USB-C video output
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One USB-C port connected to a docking station
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A USB-C to dual HDMI adapter
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A Thunderbolt dock
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Multiple HDMI or DisplayPort outputs on a desktop graphics card
Windows Setup Steps
On Windows:
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Connect both monitors to your computer or dock.
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Right-click the desktop and choose Display settings.
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Under Multiple displays, choose Extend these displays.
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Drag the display numbers to match your physical screen layout.
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Choose your main display.
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Adjust resolution and scaling if needed.
If both monitors show the same content, check whether Duplicate these displays is selected instead of Extend these displays.
macOS Setup Steps
On macOS:
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Connect the external displays or docking station.
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Open System Settings.
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Go to Displays.
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Choose the arrangement or display layout option.
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Turn off Mirror Displays.
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Arrange the displays to match your desk setup.
One important note: some MacBook models have limits on the number of external displays they support. For example, some base Apple Silicon Mac models may only support one external monitor natively. Before buying a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter or dock, check whether your MacBook supports dual external displays or needs a DisplayLink-based solution.
What If Your Laptop Has Only One HDMI or USB-C Port?
Many slim laptops have only one HDMI port, or only USB-C / Thunderbolt ports. If you want to connect two monitors, you may need an adapter, hub, or docking station.
Common choices include:
| Device | Best For |
| USB-C to HDMI adapter | Connecting one HDMI monitor |
| USB-C to dual HDMI adapter | Connecting two HDMI monitors |
| USB-C docking station | Connecting monitors, USB devices, Ethernet, SD cards, and more |
| Thunderbolt dock | High-performance multi-display and data workflows |
| HDMI splitter | Duplicating the same image to multiple screens |
| HDMI matrix switch | Routing multiple input devices to multiple displays |
If you only need one external monitor, a basic USB-C to HDMI adapter may be enough.
If you want two monitors to show different content, you need a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter, dock, or graphics output that supports extended displays.

For MacBook users who also need USB peripherals, Ethernet, SD/TF card access, and multi-monitor support, a docking station is often more useful than a single-purpose adapter. Lemorele TC100 is a 13-in-1 USB-C docking station with dual 4K HDMI ports, high-speed USB ports, Gigabit Ethernet, VGA, audio, and SD/TF card slots. It is designed for professionals who need multi-display support, fast data transfer, and seamless peripheral integration at work, at home, or while traveling.
HDMI Splitter for Dual Monitors: Does It Extend or Duplicate?
HDMI splitter for dual monitors is a popular search term, but it causes a common misunderstanding.
Most HDMI splitters take one HDMI signal and copy it to two displays. In most cases, they duplicate the same image. They do not create two independent extended desktops.
For example:
Laptop HDMI output → HDMI splitter → Monitor 1 and Monitor 2This setup usually makes both monitors show the same thing.
If your goal is:
Monitor 1 shows spreadsheetMonitor 2 shows browserthen a basic HDMI splitter is usually not enough. You need an adapter, dock, graphics output, or multi-display solution that supports independent display output.
Simple guide:
| Goal | Right Device |
| Same image on two screens | HDMI splitter |
| Different content on two screens | USB-C to dual HDMI adapter / dock / GPU outputs |
| Multiple sources to multiple displays | HDMI matrix switch |
An HDMI splitter is useful for presentations, signage, classrooms, or showing the same image on multiple displays. It is usually not the right tool for an extended dual monitor office setup.
USB-C to Dual HDMI Adapter: When You Need One
If your laptop has USB-C or Thunderbolt and you want to connect two HDMI monitors, a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter is a common option.
It is useful for:
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Connecting two HDMI monitors to a laptop
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Building a compact dual-screen workstation
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Reducing the number of separate adapters
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Showing different content on two external monitors
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Creating a portable multi-monitor setup
Before buying one, check:
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Whether your USB-C port supports video output
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Whether it supports DP Alt Mode or Thunderbolt
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Whether the adapter uses MST, DisplayLink, or another multi-display method
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Whether Windows or macOS supports the display mode you want
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Supported resolution and refresh rate
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MacBook external display limitations
Not every USB-C port supports video output. Not every dual HDMI adapter can make two monitors show different content. Always check the specifications before buying based only on the number of ports.
When Do You Need an HDMI Matrix Switch?
An HDMI matrix switch is useful for more complex setups with multiple input devices and multiple displays.
For example:
Laptop + Game Console + Media Player → HDMI Matrix → Monitor 1 + Monitor 2It is useful for:
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Meeting rooms
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Control rooms
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Classrooms
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Demo spaces
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Home theaters
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Multi-device presentation environments
An HDMI matrix switch is not usually the first choice for basic dual monitor office use. If you only want one laptop to connect to two monitors and show different content, a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter or docking station is usually a better fit.
But if you need multiple devices to switch between multiple displays, such as one screen showing a computer and another showing a media player, an HDMI matrix switch can be useful.
What to Check Before Buying an Adapter or Dock

Before buying an adapter, dock, or HDMI matrix switch, check the following:
| Check Item | Why It Matters |
| Computer video output | Confirms whether your computer supports multiple displays |
| USB-C capability | Not every USB-C port supports video |
| Operating system | Windows and macOS handle multi-display output differently |
| Display mode | Make sure it supports extend, not just mirror |
| Resolution | Check support for 1080p, 4K, or dual 4K |
| Refresh rate | Important for video, design, and smoother use |
| Mac compatibility | Some MacBooks support only one external display natively |
| Power delivery | A dock may also charge your laptop |
| Extra ports | Useful if you need USB, Ethernet, SD/TF, or audio |
| Use case | Office work, presentations, and AV switching need different tools |
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If you want to get more from your MacBook connection setup, a multi-function dock like Lemorele TC100 can be more complete than a single HDMI adapter. It provides dual 4K HDMI, high-speed USB, Gigabit Ethernet, VGA, audio, and SD/TF card slots, making it useful for professionals who need multi-monitor support, fast data transfer, and peripheral integration in one compact device.
Conclusion
A dual monitor setup can make work, study, design, trading, editing, and presentations easier. But the key is choosing the right display mode and connection device.
If you want two monitors to show different things, use extend display mode. If both screens show the same content, check whether you are using duplicate mode or a basic HDMI splitter.
For most laptop users, a USB-C to dual HDMI adapter or docking station is the practical solution. For MacBook users who also need extra ports, Ethernet, SD/TF card access, and peripheral integration, a 13-in-1 USB-C dock like Lemorele TC100 can provide a more complete workspace connection setup.
The simplest rule is: use an HDMI splitter for copying the same image, use a USB-C adapter or dock for extended dual monitors, and use an HDMI matrix switch for routing multiple sources to multiple displays.