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posted by hubie on Friday February 02 2024, @09:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the subscription-everything dept.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/01/apple-declares-last-macbook-pro-with-an-optical-drive-obsolete/

Sometimes, it's worth taking a moment to note the end of an era, even when that ending might have happened a long time ago. Today, Apple announced that it considers the mid-2012 13-inch MacBook Pro obsolete. It was the last MacBook Pro to include an optical drive for playing CDs or DVDs.

This means that any MacBook Pro with an optical drive is no longer supported.
[...]
Apple stopped selling the mid-2012 13-inch MacBook Pro in October 2016 (it was available for a while as the company's budget option in the Pro lineup), so anyone doing the math saw this coming.
[...]
The exclusion of an optical drive in subsequent MacBook Pro models was controversial, but it's now clear that whether Apple was jumping the gun at that point or not, optical drives have fallen away for most users, and many Windows laptops no longer include them.
[...]
That's a sign of just how irrelevant optical drives are for today's users, but this seems like a good time to remember a bygone era of physical media that wasn't so long ago. So farewell, mid-2012 13-inch MacBook Pro—honestly, most of us didn't miss you by this point.

[Do you still have a collection of Blu-rays/DVDs? Do you use an Optical Disc drive anymore?] I do.


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  • (Score: 2) by Tork on Saturday February 03 2024, @03:10AM

    by Tork (3914) Subscriber Badge on Saturday February 03 2024, @03:10AM (#1342895)
    I agree with your point I'd add that reliability is another factor. A toshiba laptop I had years ago failed in a frustrating way. The volume knob broke in some way that would, at the slightest provocation, leap to full volume. The laptops before that all stopped booting one day, I never did discover which component actually blew. Not long after the Toshiba I moved to Apple, and reliability got a LOT better. HOWEVER for anecdotal reasons I'm attributing that more to the increased simplicity of these machines over the years, not some engineering wizardry on Apple's part. Heck my smart phone is on track to become my primary machine. The ones I had in the 00's couldn't even keep their damn battery doors on.
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