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Exactly and one at £10 is nothing to pay!
I haven't used my optical drive (in any of my machines, including a Mac) frequently for a very very long time. In fact, I only ever use them for installing operating systems, and occasionally burning ISO's (about once a month).
Optical drives in PC's will die out soon enough with everything becoming available digitally. Soon we will all have SSD recorders under out TV's, only SSD's in our PC's, everything will connect wirelessly, operating systems will be stored on and installed from flash drives, and children will look at a disk and wonder what on earth it is for.
So when you need to burn an ISO you're going to miss it, right? Will you buy an external drive?
Optical media is here for the next decade at least, believe me. It will become redundant one day but not as soon as some people think.
My £10 drive arrived! Brilliant
Do not buy the apple one what ever you do!!!
My £10 drive arrived! Brilliant
Do not buy the apple one what ever you do!!!
I use my optical drive a lot
Mainly to rip CDs for myself, and to burn stuff for clients or friends. I can see why they did it on the laptop range but it seems a tad too early for the desktop.
What's the burn speed on those USB SuperDrives? I've never used one but I'd imagine it's painfully slow in comparison to an internal drive?
No. The SuperDrive is USB 2.0. There is no difference in speed between 3.0 and 2.0 because a CD can be written at max 16x which is 2 megabytes a second or a DVD can be written at max 8x which is 11 megabytes a second. (I am assuming you are using the fastest possible CD/DVD) USB 2.0 runs at a peak speed of 60 megabytes a second which is more than enough to handle the write and read speed of a CD/DVD
Hi All,
I'm a forum noob, but thought I'd begin by expressing my annoyance at Apple removing the optical drives from their new machine. For me, this is forcing everyone to buy music, video and software through their own apple stores. What does everyone else think?
Going to be buying a rMBP very soon, lack of optical drive is not an issue for me.
Lack of built in Ethernet is a pain though!
Why ? Just get a USB to ethernet adaptor. Apple sacrifice certain technology to allow a friendly minimal build. It's not like you can't add functionality.
Yeah, as I tried to make in my point in a previous post, it demonstrates how Apple is now all about the consumer and less about the 'professional', given that 'Pro' machines used to be aimed at such a market.