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So buy the white plastic Macbook. That still has FW. {quote}
Because, as we'd expect you to already know, the plastic MacBook has hobbled integrated graphics.
When Apple made the graphics 6x more powerful, then the MacBook became usable as a small powerhouse- until the Firewire port got ripped out.
Either way, you get a deliberately hobbled machine (though I'd have to take inferior GPU over lack of FireWire.)
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> {quote:title=IEBA1 wrote:}
> FireWire has been standard issue on DV camcorders for well over a decade. {quote}
Yeah, I myself have a Canon Elura, a miniDV camera circa 1999, that has a FireWire interface on it. I don't need a lesson in FireWire's ubiquity over the course of the past decade.{quote}
Then why on earth would you say "A lot of standard-definition (SD) video cameras have relied on FireWire for the past few years." when you know that's a lie. Was your goal to misrepresent the depth and breadth of the products on the market that absolutely require FireWire to transfer data? Well, you did.
Why would you do that?
I don't know if it was worse thinking you didn't know, or now knowing that you know the truth, but tried to make like it was just the past few years and "a lot" as opposed to every single one of MiniDV, HDV, Digital-8 and more. Yea, thanks for clarifying what poor journalism that was.
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I'm having trouble understanding why Apple's decision to excise FireWire from the MacBook specifically is somehow seen by everyone as a referendum on Apple's support of FireWire all together, or the future of FireWire as a professional interface standard.{quote}
How many of Apple's last three newly designed laptops (apple's biggest selling product by far, according to them) have had Firewire 400?
None.
You can expect the next Mini (if it doesn't get axed altogether) will also lack FW-400.
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I have one, thank you.
I had to buy it for my work, because it has a dedicated GPU and FW-400.
Elsewise I would have bought the far more appropriately priced, and convenient to use MacBook.
I use mine in a video gear rack and having wires snaking out of both sides of the machine is a problem- they make it wider than the standard rack width so it can't sit inside a normal rack shelf. and it has to sit sideways or else the optical can't be accessed from the front of the rack.
A computer with ports on one side and an optical drive on the other side- like the old and new MacBook would be a far better solution if it weren't for the crippled GPU then, and no FireWire now.
And, no, getting a $3000 Mac Pro to edit DV is an even worse joke. One that I refuse subject myself to.
http://techthoughts....e-mac-mini-pro/
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Ah. Finally.
A bit of honest appreciation for the reality of the bad situation.
Should have put a bit of that into the original article.



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