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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

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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

Nov 11, 2012 1:06 PM in response to Ziatron

I just finished a project in NTSC (20+ DVDs so far and counting), am now putting the same thing together in PAL for several people in Europe (two of them do not even have computers - but they DO have DVD players and TVs) so I can send them there (as Christmas presents). On the other hand, here is a different (and much easier and less work for me) thought: send them a TXT message "ur xmas gift is on utube" - frohe Weihnachten! 😁

Nov 15, 2012 4:10 PM in response to grandfield

This is probably a continuation of Apple's quest to control everything about its products. They will ask you to bring in your DVD's to the Apple store so they can transfer them to your computer through icloud maybe. Then they will start forcing other companies to provide everything (movie rentals, software, music, etc) through the App store or Itunes. Someone in there thinks he is the new Steve Jobs and wants to carry on Job's philisophy, but I think he is actually doing ****. This is going to be ahead of its time like when they had DVD slots instead of trays. Im predicting an epic fail but I can't wait to see how they answer your questions. If I am right, I should run Apple; they need a new Steve Jobs.If I am wrong, Im buying the new iMac.

Nov 15, 2012 4:37 PM in response to seventy one

Not sure if it's a practice run - but they are determined to do it one way only and are genuinely surprised when someone tells them (as I just did) that they a) do not have a lightning speed connection and b) they have monthly bandwidth caps which is something quite a few ISPs have or are implementing - probably a bottom line thing for them: if you use more than your cap, they charge you extra. As for connections, I decided to use recovery yesterday after a logic board replacement which resulted in several hiccups and some tense troubleshooting. So, the recovery - download only - took just over 3 hours for a 4 +/- GB file (plus approx. 25 minutes for the install). The movie project I just finished came in at 4.2 GB - aside from any other concerns, would I actually waste 5 + hours to upload the movie (5 hours is a guess, but may actually be a low estimate since upload speeds are much slower than downloads)? I think not.

Nov 15, 2012 7:03 PM in response to baltwo

"We just rented our billionth DVD," said Chris Goodrich, head of public relations for Redbox, which offers DVDs for $1 at distinctive kiosks found in shopping centers, grocery stores and fast-food outlets.


"Last year we were installing a new kiosk every hour," Goodrich said. "Today there are locations so busy we're adding a second kiosk. And we've just started carrying Blu-ray discs.


"So it may be sexy to talk about electronic delivery, but right now consumers still prefer the portable, physical disc that they can carry from room to room or household to household."


Officials for Netflix, say they expect to be delivering discs for at least the next two decades.


"Sorry, honey, that cloud storage service where I put the video of our wedding/son's first birthday/daughter's first dance recital just went bankrupt."

Nov 16, 2012 1:34 AM in response to BDAqua

I have mentioned before on this thread that I don't think that the lack of a DVD drive on the new iMac is a huge issue, but this does not mean that DVD as a format is dead - far from it. As I type I have just had another request from one of my clients in Africa for another shipment for DVDs from our latest film project on the Nile. Now of course I am not going to burn several hundred DVDs here in my office - I outsource that to the replication house, but the masters are created on our system, so the need for DVD authouring and burning is very real.


Apple does need to try and understand that while the world moves at a million miles an hour in Cupertino, the rest of the planet often lags far behind. The thought of many users in Africa (population set to be 1 billion by 2015) all being able to download vast files from the web, is just ludicrous. At best in sub Saharan Africa, boradband is 3kbps right now with a bandwidth cap.


Apple has to understand that the machines that Apple produces are used by creative producers who actually manufacture product - we are not just consumers sitting about on our iPads wonder what else we can buy from the mother ship. If Apple had bothered to factor this in to their thinking, the DVD drive would still be available on the new iMac.


The fact that the DVD drive is absent from the new machine is not something that is insurmountable for a producer (external USB DVD writers are $75), the belief that DVD is dead shows some seriously woolly thinking!

Nov 16, 2012 1:42 AM in response to ajophoto

I agree with you, and would add that, IMO, Apple's policy is a puzzling marketing flaw: you make money by giving the consumer what he wants, not by insisting that something else is better when in fact it can be seriously inconvenient.


Removing the internal Superdrive partly for reasons of design is one thing, withdrawing iDVD (and cancelling its licensing) is quite another. That may make video hobbyists turn to Windows.

No DVD drive in new iMac ???

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