
See the Apple Card Customer Agreement for more information.

Taxes and shipping are not included in ACMI and are subject to your card’s variable APR. If you choose the pay-in-full or one-time-payment option for an ACMI-eligible purchase instead of choosing ACMI as the payment option at checkout, that purchase will be subject to the variable APR assigned to your Apple Card. Variable APRs for Apple Card other than ACMI range from 15.24% to 26.24% based on creditworthiness. See for more information about eligible products.

to select at checkout for certain Apple products purchased at Apple Store locations,, the Apple Store app, or by calling 1-800-MY-APPLE, and is subject to credit approval and credit limit. Assuming you wish to run macOS on your Mac computer then you will not get it working, or rather your chances are pretty slim.◊ Apple Card Monthly Installments (ACMI) is a 0% APR payment option available only in the U.S. So, yes, this is supported in Windows and if you boot your 2014 vintage Mac with Windows it would take only a MST DisplayPort to dual HDMI adapter to do as you wish. To get this working would involve some "hack" so there is no simple answer to your question other than it won't work. Apple did not include support for MST in their OS or drivers. This is proven quite clearly with people booting Windows or Linux on their Apple computers and getting MST adapters and displays to work.

The hardware in Apple computers is capable of supporting MST, so that's not stopping you. Without any official support for this your chances of it working consistently for you are slim. I've come across people on the internet that claimed getting two displays from one port on Apple computers running macOS but it does seem quite clear that Apple does not support this function. There are video adapters from DisplayPort to two HDMI ports, and these would be supported by Windows and Linux but not on macOS. Two displays from one DisplayPort connection requires "multi-stream transport", and Apple does not support this.
