You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

No DVD drive in new iMac ???

So I have just completely upgraded my 15 years of home movies on DVD over the last year.

I converted video, old DVDs and used imovie to make great copies for all the family.


I just learned that if I get a new imac from Dec 2012, they have no DVD drive ?

What ?

If its true, then I need to buy into some device that can play and burn them for the next years.


Yep, Apple have a vision, but I cannot see it and I am 50.

In 180 months , when I am 65, I wont care about the visons of Apple.

But i will care about the memories on the discs and as Apple dont let on why they restrict the continuation or stop the use or anyone else using aformat that quite honestly is massively serviceable today and will be for some years.


Glad I dint chucj out the old dell and also, I will going fire her up to play my movies and memories. Steve Jobs is pictured on some of those DVDs, guess the new guys wanted to move on pretty fast from that era too !


Hmmm, now where is the off button, I need to do some exercise and get real again !


see ya

iMac (27-inch Mid 2011)

Posted on Oct 23, 2012 3:19 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 23, 2012 3:30 PM

Just do what I will be doing: don't buy a new iMac! 👿


With no Firewire you won't be able to connect your video camera either!

1,509 replies

Dec 24, 2014 1:41 AM in response to grandfield

I'm in agreement this was a horribly bad idea on Apple's part. Maybe not from the marketing/finance end, but from a tech standpoint, this is what makes customers finally go elsewhere for their computer. It seems more then apparent to me that the optical drives weren't taken out because of tech problems. It was done from a standpoint of price gauging the loyal customer. 75% of the working world still have need for use of an optical drive, even with online downloads, flash cards, cloud storage etc.. Now the consumer is forced to pay for music and movies through iTunes. No one should have to repay for computer programs they already own. An optical drive should be provided for this alone. With the exhorbitant amount Apple charges for their computers, they can afford to throw an optical drive in there. They should charge less money if they don't want to include them.


Friends with laptops like watching movies on planes. Bad enough to take it out of laptops, but desktops? Why bother streamlining when you lose practicality? People aren't taking an iMac on a plane or to a client, so who cares if its 5mm thinner but now I have to go purchase all these external options which completely defeats the purpose of an all-in-one desktop! This is where it seems like a financial move to me. In the 90's, I was in college for animation. At the time, my University used Macs with OSX 9 and lower. They crashed all the time and were horrible until Apple installed the Unix based platform. I never bought a Mac until they switched to OSX10. It's been a dream until as of late. Apple seems to be sliding the slope back down to their pre OS Unix days. They need an optical drive, speakers should be on front of monitor along with SD slots. At least 1 FW port. And a USB adaptor should be included if you need more ports. I was literally about to purchase a 27" 3.4 ghz retina display iMac but didnt purchase when I saw there's no optical drive available.

Apple, just like anyone else deserves to be scrutinised and criticised, particularly when they play dirty and try to manipulate the market and insult their customers as they have done here, as well as committing appalling design crimes!

Dec 24, 2014 2:07 AM in response to Bluestar_dragon

Bluestar_dragon wrote:


I'm in agreement this was a horribly bad idea on Apple's part. Maybe not from the marketing/finance end, but from a tech standpoint, this is what makes customers finally go elsewhere for their computer.

And yet, Apple just recently set an all time company record for the most Macs sold in a single quarter, & did so during a period when overall PC sales were flat.


That is a pretty strong indication of how "the market" (IOW, customers) actually has reacted to this.


There are good technical reasons for not building optical drives into iMacs. That's been discussed to death in this now very old topic so I won't repeat any of it again. Suffice it to say that if you really need an optical drive to use with current or recent iMacs there are many external USB-connected ones to choose from, some as cheap as $30, & the market seems OK with that.

Jan 7, 2015 1:40 AM in response to Yer_Man

Quite frankly I don't know why this issue has generated so much interest. I use two Mac Mini's professionally and it's the easiest thing going to just plug in a remote Liteon or iomega disk drive. With the ease of a usb connector lead I'm generally ready to record or play within a couple on minutes. On a personal requirement I have loaded my collection of over 250 CDs on a £16 Liteon drive and all into iTunes. The absence of an internal disc drive is no longer an issue. Life evolves as we're now finding with the HDD. Now we're looking at SSDs. It's evolution!

No DVD drive in new iMac ???

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.