The illusionist movie Apple

The illusionist movie

Apple has never geared itself toward average consumers anyway theyve always gone after pro-sumers, graphics artists, and video professionals. Yet they dont have Blu-ray, they dont have matte screens, and they dont even have enough ports on alleged pro models do get actual work done. Who exactly do they think their customers are? If they think they can continue being successful just releasing refreshes and getting fanbois apologizes to those here who fit that description to keep buying new toys then, Im sorry, but their current success doesnt look likely to continue all that much longer particularly in the current economy. adding a bluray reader would hardly be an upgrade for a pro user, it would only be an upgrade like you. and from the sounds of it you are hardly a pro user. adding a bluray writer would be one tiny tiny tiny step closer to this, at such a small size 5mm the technology would only allow 1x or 2x write speeds, hardly efficient for pro users. i am sure that they would ideally do work away whatever that may be on their laptop, save it on their large HD, and take it home to their new 16x LG bluray writer! that would be much more efficient for a pro user. adding a bluray reader would hardly be an upgrade for a pro user, it would only be an upgrade like you. and from the sounds of it you are hardly a pro user. adding a bluray writer would be one tiny tiny tiny step closer to this, at such a small size 5mm the technology would only allow 1x or 2x write speeds, hardly efficient for pro users. i am sure that they would ideally do work away whatever that may be on their laptop, save it on their large HD, and take it home to their new 16x LG bluray writer! that would be much more efficient for a pro user. I have to say that as a Pro user myself Blu-Ray is quite essential in a laptop. It isnt all about just being able to create content on that medium, it is also about being able to view Blu-Ray material away from your chunky huge desktop. If you go to see a client, it makes it a lot easier. I have to say that as a Pro user myself Blu-Ray is quite essential in a laptop. It isnt all about just being able to create content on that medium, it is also about being able to view Blu-Ray material away from your chunky huge desktop. If you go to see a client, it makes it a lot easier. the illusionist movie a fair enough claim. good point, i didnt really address nor think about that issue. i daresay there would be a TON of prosumers that want a writable BR burner as well though, and at the current technologies and speeds that just wouldnt be very feasible. thats a fair enough claim. good point, i didnt really address nor think about that issue. i daresay there would be a TON of prosumers that want a writable BR burner as well though, and at the current technologies and speeds that just wouldnt be very feasible. Yes, I would like a burnable Blu-Ray drive on the Macbook Pro as a BTO. More for a backup than anything else. But certainly a combo drive which has the abilities to burn DVDs and read Blu-Ray seemed like a logical step to me for the Pro end laptop, obviously not for Apple. The whole proprietary mini Display Port connector and lack of Blu-Ray are forcing me to look elsewhere for a laptop. : Yes, I would like a burnable Blu-Ray drive on the Macbook Pro as a BTO. More for a backup than anything else. But certainly a combo drive which has the abilities to burn DVDs and read Blu-Ray seemed like a logical step to me for the Pro end laptop, obviously not for Apple. The whole proprietary mini Display Port connector and lack of Blu-Ray are forcing me to look elsewhere for a laptop. : dont get me wrong or anything, i would love to see the burnable bluray drive inside of the MBP as BTO, but for the price and lack of speed in the drive it would hardly be worth it. for just a 2x burnable drive, probably not even RW capable you are looking at 700 at least, from apple anyway, we all know the illusionist movie they are like. that drive would take way to long. For Blu-ray disks, 1x speed is defined as 36 megabits per second Mbit/s, which is equal to 5 megabytes per second MB/s. 4 However, as the minimum required data transfer rate for Blu-ray movie disks is 54 Mbit/s, the minimum writing speed for Blu-ray writers should be 2X. if you are burning a full 50gb DL bluray disc, that is going to take around 5hours to burn.

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.

Leave a comment