Sometimes, a dock will supply power and USB devices (via USB-C fallback) but not the monitor or Ethernet. The Control Center will show "No devices connected." This indicates the PCIe negotiation failed. The fix often involves power-cycling the dock while the Control Center is open.
If you own an Intel laptop with a Thunderbolt port, you have this app installed—whether you know it or not. Spend five minutes exploring it. Next time your external SSD doesn't show up, you will remember to check the "Approve" button. It is not glamorous software, but it is the reason your expensive peripherals work securely. intel thunderbolt control center
However, as of 2025, the Intel Thunderbolt Control Center remains the only place to manage device whitelisting for older TB3 devices, view daisy-chain topology, and force firmware updates. It is legacy software, but for millions of Intel laptops in the field, it is still the sheriff in town. | Pros | Cons | | :--- | :--- | | Critical security layer against DMA attacks | Frustrating driver/app version conflicts | | Clear visual topology for daisy-chaining | Minimalist UI lacks advanced diagnostics | | Necessary for eGPU and high-speed RAID | Being slowly replaced by Windows native USB4 settings | | Handles firmware updates automatically | UWP store dependency breaks on offline PCs | Sometimes, a dock will supply power and USB
Sometimes, a dock will supply power and USB devices (via USB-C fallback) but not the monitor or Ethernet. The Control Center will show "No devices connected." This indicates the PCIe negotiation failed. The fix often involves power-cycling the dock while the Control Center is open.
If you own an Intel laptop with a Thunderbolt port, you have this app installed—whether you know it or not. Spend five minutes exploring it. Next time your external SSD doesn't show up, you will remember to check the "Approve" button. It is not glamorous software, but it is the reason your expensive peripherals work securely.
However, as of 2025, the Intel Thunderbolt Control Center remains the only place to manage device whitelisting for older TB3 devices, view daisy-chain topology, and force firmware updates. It is legacy software, but for millions of Intel laptops in the field, it is still the sheriff in town. | Pros | Cons | | :--- | :--- | | Critical security layer against DMA attacks | Frustrating driver/app version conflicts | | Clear visual topology for daisy-chaining | Minimalist UI lacks advanced diagnostics | | Necessary for eGPU and high-speed RAID | Being slowly replaced by Windows native USB4 settings | | Handles firmware updates automatically | UWP store dependency breaks on offline PCs |