Apple Rumored To Remove Old-School USB Ports On Next MacBook Pro (vice.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: First the headphone jack, now the USB port? Rumor has it that Apple may get rid of the USB 3.0 port and the Magsafe port (where the charger plugs in) on the next generation of MacBooks. Japanese tech site Macotakara, which accurately predicted that Apple would kill the headphone jack on the iPhone 7, now also claims that the USB port is on the way out. The move would be similar to Apple's latest 12-inch MacBook and its streamlined profile. There's also word that Apple may discontinue the 11-inch MacBook Air to focus instead on the 13-inch laptop. Discontinuing the 11-inch MacBook Air would also potentially boost sales on the 12-inch MacBook. If these rumors are in fact true, then the new MacBooks will have only a USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 ports. Both of these ports are about the size of the part of an iPhone charger that plugs into the phone. But since most laptop accessories still plug in via the USB port, Apple owners might have to use an adaptor, or upgrade their technology. Meanwhile, the new MacBooks would likely be charged through the USB-C port or Thunderbolt 3 port. Currently, Apple already sells a USB-C dock with other USB and HDMI ports for $79. The USB-C port uses USB 3.1 Standard, according to PCWorld, which will connect to a wide variety of accessories, such as external hard drives, cameras, and printers. The USB 3.1 can also transfer data between the host computer and the peripheral accessories at a speed of 10 gigabits per second, which is twice as fast as the USB 3.0. Apple is expected to reveal the new Macs at an October 27th event in Cupertino, California.
I have a 2011 MacBook Pro.
There is only one feature I require to justify an upgrade: a matte display.
Apple didn't not provide it. Therefore, no upgrade.
That would not be good. I've tripped over my power cable far too many times and been grateful for having Magsafe.
I had hoped Apple would find a way of continuing MagSafe with USB-C even though they didn't with the MacBook.
The only way I can envisage Apple keeping MagSafe with USB-C is to re-located it to the power brick end of the cable.
Feels like a big step backwards if they don't do something to retain one of the best psychical features of Mac laptops.
Seriously. Who else gives us such wonderful reasons to buy their laptops and new hardware every few years, like forced obsolescence? It's such a joy to pay Apple over and over for virtually the same hardware, just with new ports and slightly faster CPUs. Bless those guys. They're doing Capitalist God's work.
only 2 ports and no power jack?
How fucking thing does this $1200+ laptop need to be and I can't get an NVIDA or ATI video card without paying at least $2000+
Clearly the Apple engineers were told wrong. You're supposed to reduce the thickness, not make the entire thing so small that it only consists of one or two ports!
No standard USB ports?!?!?
Such COURAGE!
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
Or need to carry around another stupid converter for every single device I might want to use?
I'm thinking of history.
1) Apple removes optical drives. These were widely used, but on the decline.
2) Apple removes 3.5mm jacks (how courageous). These are widely used, and holding steady.
3) Apple removes USB. These are widely used, and moreover critical for many peripherals, especially mice, keyboards, and thumb-drives. (I'm sure it will be a courageous first step, and the early adopters will get a free $300 proprietary mouse included when they buy the computer.)
They seem to be escalating. What next? Apple removes the monitor from the MacBook; although I guess if they did so it would easily let them create the thinnest, lightest, most portable MacBook ever.
I can't count the number of times I've tripped over a laptop cable. I've lost multiple hard drives but only one broken screen with my Windows laptops. Thanks to MagSafe I've lost zero anything on my MacBooks.
One gets the impression that they don't. I mean, I wasn't their market anyway. I absolutely despise the no-buttons touch panel on recent Macbooks. But not having any useful ports completely rules out the device even for my wife.
HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
Come on, why stop here? Now that OSX has Siri, let's also remove screen, trackpad and keyboard. Looking forward to iEcho.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Apple is removing a standard port.
The floppy drive made sense. Legacy/serial ports etc. too.
The optical drive made sense.
The headphone jack almost makes sense (under the right circumstances, but not for me so I won't be upgrading from my 6S+)
Removing the physical home button is simply retarded.
And the USB port?
Positively asinine. All the other ports were either obsolete or being replaced by other technologies. The USB port is a standard connector used by literally millions of devices. Hopefully, this is where Apple finally realizes they've jumped the shark, that removing more and more useful connections won't be bringing Jobs back from the dead, and they'll have to actually innovate or die.
I don't like Android's ecosystem for mobile devices. Google and their incessant spying just isn't my bag. But I'd rather see Apple die than continue to make stupid decisions over and over and over again to the point that their products end up being just a screen with content you do not control and an Apple logo on it that you are compelled by the EULA to stare at for 8 hours a day lest your license to stare at the device be revoked and the hardware is bricked. Because that's where it ends up.
.. since Steve's been gone. So sad.
How can any company in the PC market sell something without at least one USB 3.0 port??? It is the most ubiquitous data transfer connection available and has virtually universal compatibility with peripherals. Or did their marketing idiots think they can make another $39 for an adapter peripheral that's clunky and easy to lose? It can't be for space reasons and they can't pull the "we're trying to waterproof it" bullshit this time.
Topping this off is no Magsafe, which is infinitely better than the round connector I have on a couple of Dell laptops I own and saved the Macbooks I owned for years from falling.
Apple, you're not edgy or innovative any more. You're just being greedy and/or stupid and apparently don't want my business nor that of many other people? Sure, I'm a "tech nerd" but this time you're going to piss off the average buyer of your products.
Piece of advice: go back to what you had on the mid-2013 non-Retina Macbook Pro in terms of serviceability and I/O, and update it with Kaby Lake CPUs and a new Nvidia 10xx-series GPU and a non-glossy display, and you'll rip your competitors to shreds.
It's all about making huge markups on the converter dongles.
It is my personal opinion that the old USB A connector should have died 10+ years ago. Maybe even 20.
I've been a long time Apple supporter, even going so far as to pay all the $$$'s for one of the late 2013 "trash can" Mac Pro workstations, shortly after it was released. (I did that only because I owned both a 2006 and 2008 Mac Pro tower before it, and both were excellent computers that I got years of daily use out of -- paying for themselves several times over with the work and entertainment value I got out of them. I figured I'd invest in the new direction Apple was taking things, with faith they'd make sense of what seemed at first to be kind of a step backwards in design and functionality.)
Well, unfortunately, what I'm seeing is a trend away from Apple catering at all to "power users" or "computer enthusiasts". Under Steve Jobs, at least their push towards minimalist styling/design was still well-balanced with giving the user what they really needed to get things done. (EG. When Apple declared the 3.5" floppy was dead and removed it? The rest of the Windows PC world thought that was crazy. Yet the advent of IOMega Zip disks, Syquest cartridges, dirt cheap CDR media, flash drives, SD and CF cards and more proved Apple was right. They were just pushing people a little further towards that "cutting edge" of tech, instead of sitting complacent in the middle of the "tried and true, but fading in usability" zone of technology. And when Apple decided to quit including optical drives in any of their systems? Again, some people threw fits but it's ultimately proved to be the sensible solution. External CD/DVD/Blu-Ray players and recorders are cheap and easy to plug in if/when needed, and they don't bulk up or weigh down a computer when you DON'T intend to use one. It also means when they break down, which they do fairly often with all their mechanical parts inside, they're easier to replace.)
With Thunderbolt? I feel like Apple tried, once again, to "skate to where they thought the puck was going to be" instead of to where it was. But that time, perhaps they took a chance and weren't quite right. Nonetheless, it wasn't really a big problem for users because it was only there in addition to plenty of other ports. The ability for Apple's Thunderbolt port to double as a "Mini DisplayPort" connector ensured people would use it with a dongle to attach extra monitors even if they never used it for anything else. And on higher end systems like my Mac Pro? It's actually quite useful since you pretty much need some kind of external drive enclosure to have a decent amount of storage space directly attached to the machine. There are a number of good options for multi-drive cabinets with Thunderbolt connections, and it provides great throughput without bottlenecking a USB bus.
But now, I feel like options are getting deleted just because Apple would prefer to have fewer configuration options to stock in their lineup, or because they're pushing change just for the sake of being different. (That whole elimination of matte vs. glossy displays is a great example, even if it still happened under Steve Job's watch. There was clearly a LOT of demand for anti-glare screen displays, yet Apple simply ignored it and told people "Tough luck. We think you'll love our product enough to buy it anyway, so we don't care.")
This move to USB-C? I think the new standard is just fine for netbooks or "Ultraportables" where people are primarily concerned about how light and thin it is, and probably don't WANT to connect very much up to it. But it definitely has no business in a Macbook PRO laptop being sold any time this year ... Not unless it's just there in additional to a couple of regular USB 3.0 ports. Otherwise, you're ignoring a universal standard that has no signs of dying yet. Go shop for a new inkjet printer and tell me how many have USB-C connections on them vs. traditional USB right now. Same for any digital cameras with connection cables.)
Secondarily, I agree that this change means eliminating a connector (mag-safe) that really does offer a great feature that competing laptops never had. IMO,
You spoiled brat! Wait and see how "old school" everything you know and believe will be 2 to 5 years from now. Enjoy it while it lasts.
Apple may get rid of the USB 3.0 port
I've only heard about plans to replace USB-A with USB-C, not to eliminate USB ports. USB-C is an actual standard that already exists. USB-A to USB-C adapters are easy to come by, and as time goes on, more and more devices will be using USB-C. I have no problem with this. In fact, my cell phone already has a USB-C port.
I can see them removing charger ports and going for wireless charging like the Nexus 5.
Bill Amend was prescient.
And this is what you get. It should come as no surprise we see bullshit like the Watch Edition and a castrated Macbook and iPhone.
You can go on amazon and get an assload of USB-C to USB 3 adapters, for next to nothing.
SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
My first question is, how will I get a cheap compact $20 USB hub to plug into my Mac so I don't get affected by this nonsense?
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
What will Apple remove next? The keyboard and the screen?
Maybe they can just remove everything. Now that would be a MacBook "Air".
I don't have any USB devices.
I just threw them all out because Apple chose them to be no longer cool
Sounds like they've just designed a super-powered, jumbo-sized iPad. Of course people will buy it, though.
The fantasy is a Kaby lake macBook pro with i7 octo core processor 32GB of ram and 2TB SSD with headphone jack, USB and thunderbolt ports and Ethernet jack. But instead you will get a haswell Macbook pro i3 dual core with 8gb ram 256GB 5400rpm hard drive with no headphone jack no USB ports and having to pay $179 per port adapters to the single propritery port included which can't be used while charging.
Meanwhile Tim Cook laughs all the way to the bank.
You can do anything you want as long as it doesn't have to work. Glad I don't like Apple in the first place.
HP Spectre (ultra thin) has only Type C now. I haven't found it to be a problem. Indeed, a lot of the newer USB drives have both ports so they make good transfer devices. Push the slider one way for an older USB, or the other way and out pops a Type C.
How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
Wait, no more USB ports!? Oh wait, no, there it is. It has USB-C. This isn't the "removal" of USB like almost all of the text is trying to portray, this is merely the change from one style of USB port to another. This is absolutely a non-issue. It has been known all along that USB-C was designed from the get-go to be a more universal port, offering charging for laptops too. AND, there is absolutely nothing stopping anyone from using a USB-C to USB-A/B/Mini/Micro/Male/Female cable to plug in literally every single existing USB device into this port. Need more ports? Just get a USB-C to "standard" USB 3.0 HUB.
would just do away with the keyboard. after all, a real computer should just intuit what the user wants.
What more is there to say?
I'm certainly not buying that crippled shit.
I'm glad to see this. No, I'm not going to buy one of their laptops, but it will help push adoption of USB-C the way the original iMac helped make USB commonplace.
We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
It was time for a refresh, and hearing the rumors of the batshittery they were likely to do with the keyboard, and the inane OLED strip of softkeys, and I made the decision to just jump into a well configured 13" MBPr. Now that is looking like a prescient decision. I like the two thunderbolt ports, the two USB3 ports, and the SD card port. It is plenty thin enough, and I get a good 9 hours of normal usage out of it.
I get the lifecycle, and the staleness of the current MBP line, and their stretching refresh cycles, but I am glad I jumped when I did.
It is still better than the Lenovo T450 I just got for work (what a f'd up trackpad, and absolutely the worst laptop keyboard I have had in a long long time.
Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress
"Hello again" can only mean one thing -- they're bringing back the SCSI port!!!!!11 Or maybe the floppy drive. Either way -- STOKED. :D :D :D
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
USB 3.0 came out in 2009. Not really old-school, even if the port design is older.
Funny enough while looking that up I found this:
"Using USB 3 devices on Mac computers" https://support.apple.com/en-c...
I assume they'll delete this page soon. Not like Apple cares about previous generations anyway.
Awesome logic.
Go shop for a new inkjet printer and tell me how many have USB-C connections on them vs. traditional USB right now.
I think you chose a poor example. Most printers that I'm aware of feature a USB Type-B connector on them, and don't come with any sort of cable.
USB Type-C is just a new USB connector. It's still signal compatible with existing USB devices. As virtually all inkjet printers don't come with a cable, you just ensure you buy a USB Type C to USB Type B cable to go with your printer, the same way you'd need to buy a USB Type C to USB Type A cable.
Yaz
Switches to new subscription-only wireless charging system where power is beamed to your Macbook from Cupertino, CA. Pay no attention to that tingling sensation or to the smoke coming out of your family's dog.
It's being an ass.
No built-in Blu-ray for Mac users... no, better... no optical drives! Not even in the professional models.
Touchscreen is silly for computers... seems Windows users like it lots... we'll give Mac users a little bit, a touch bar... yeah, that's it.
Look at that guy over there, he's using a flash drive... how silly... he should be using the cloud... we'll make him use the cloud. What's that? He doesn't live in Cupertino with a fiber to the home type connection? Well, fuck him. He should learn to.
Dear Apple,
I'm looking to upgrade from my MacBook Pro in the next year. I want a touchscreen. I want USB ports that work with my flash drives.
It looks like I'm going to go with Windows. I'll drag my extended family along, reversing my pushing the Mac for the last 20 or so years.
I'll have to swallow my pride in the process, but you know what I call that?
Courage.
No, his mistake was choosing a printer as the example rather than a flash drive, external optical drive, etc. He is right to say that Apple has no business removing standard USB ports.
MagSafe needs to die. I would consider its demise a step forward. Apple's power adapters suck, and the move to something like USB-C for charging is something I would celebrate. The death of standard USB ports to do it however is something I wouldn't.
Hey, it's Tim Cook.
No new macs.
Just pretty carrying cases for the existing macs.
Oh, and more SKU's, gotta have more SKU's.
As a professional software engineer, I have never looked at the side of my MacBook Pro and wished it had fewer ways for me to connect something. Never have I complained about a few millimeters lost to an rarely used SD card slot or Firewire port. I know that eventually a customer is going to hand me an SD card or old external hard drive and I'll be thankful I can just plug in and have it work. "Professional" machines have to be able to do anything when needed. If Apple removes _THE_MOST_USED_ port for connecting miscellaneous peripherals then these machines no longer deserve the moniker "Professional". The only complaint I've ever had about USB ports is that I don't have enough! (And don't get me started on never-there-when-you-need-them dongles and adapters.)
Apple is all about looks and they have to make it look sleeker than anything else out there even at the cost of functionality. This is the real reason they're removing the USB and HDMI ports. They can get it slightly thinner by not including the standard traditional ports.
EOMA68 (a new modular computer standard) computer cards are shipping with micro HDMI, micro USB, and microSDHC for similar space saving reasons. In the case of the first EOMA68 computer card it's not to show off, but to fit within the space available on the card itself. EOMA68 is based around the same physical spec of the PCMCIA cards from back in the day. The tooling still exists and as such can be re-utilized. The actual EOMA68 standard is not PCMCIA nor compatible with PCMCIA mind you.
EOMA68 is great for desktops, laptops, and so on, and the lack of normal standard USB ports on the computer card itself doesn't hamper users because such ports can and are broken out on the housings where such ports make sense (for example the first desktop and laptop housings that are being manufactured shortly have USB ports whereas a tablet or phone housing might utilize micro USB instead).
To carry all your adapters.
I know there are benefits to standardizing, but this is getting ridiculous. Now I'll have to carry an adapter for the SD card from my camera, an adapter for any older USB devices, an adapter for video out. Anything else? All for the sake of having 1 type of port instead of 3 or 4 that function just fine as they are.
exactly, and they cost about what a USB to PS/2 adapter cost (the keyboard adapter), and i've seen those included with TONS of aftermarket USB keyboards (to the point that I have half a dozen or so in my 'parts' bin). Honestly, most vendors will just start including an adapter in the box, pass the (mild) cost on to the customer, and build USB-C items.
I've decided to Diversify my Holdings. I've divided my cash between my left and right pockets, instead of all in one.
[Ultraportables] "where people are primarily concerned about how light and thin it is"
Exactly. I do NOT want a MacBook Pro that is thinner. I don't. I want more battery life. I want faster performance. The thing is already thin enough. The tradeoff between the size and battery life is already adequate. If people truly want even thinner, then buy one of those "ultraportables", for people who care more about portability than performance in terms of CPU, GPU, battery life, ports, etc. For god's sake don't negate the entire point of the "Pro" in "Macbook Pro" turning into a wafer-thin wimp with only 1 type of port on it.
And if I can't get a pony built into it, please bring back the matte screen as an *option*. I'll pay more for it.
From the looks of it I'm probably going to be buying used MacBook Pros and upgrading those if I buy any of them again.
This is a huge step backwards for me. Losing the magsafe adapter itself is almost a deal breaker, but magsafe, old style USB, and SDcard slots?! Sure I could buy some $80 adapter to carry around and still get -most- of the same functionality, but that's a band-aid not a solution.
This is getting a bit ridiculous. Windows 10 is a flaming pile of excrement, Linux is still only a half way feasible option in my field because no one wants to support it, and now Apple has gone full stupid. It's 2016, can I please just buy a reasonably priced, up to date, well designed laptop, with a decent OS capable of easily interacting with technology older than six months without having to carry around half a dozen different dongles and adapters? Is that so unreasonable?
Fuck Apple.
My computer is so new and cutting edge, I've removed the Apple! They're on their way out!
Yeah, good point.... I admit I used a bad example with the printers. To be honest though, it's been quite a while since I bought one. I still own and use several older ones here, and in at least one of those cases, it actually did include a USB cable with it. But sure, the cost of a cable is relatively minimal and if they're going to make you buy it separately anyway -- no big deal to go with a USB-C type.
But flash drives are going to be a problem, as are plenty of specialty cables. (EG. I have a USB to OBDII programming cable that's needed to download custom tunes to one of my cars.) I guess you can use any of this stuff with USB-C to USB adapters or a hub that converts the connection -- but again, that's extra stuff you have to carry with you on a laptop, so not really an attractive option.
Just look at the reviews on Apple's site, people hate it. Honestly, this is ridiculous. I have an 11-inch Air that has 2 usb, mag-safe, and mini-display port. If they can fit those ports on this machine, how hard can it be on 12-15 inch models? What's the benefit?
Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
are they eliminating the antiquated and horrible 3.5mm analogue audio jack? That's all I need to know about. And whether I will need a new USB-C headset to go with my new lightning one.
This is done to make the product better, for sure, but whom? Removing capability creates less options for consumers. I don't get how that makes a better product.
Flash drives aren't a problem either... plenty of USB-C flash drives for cheap on Amazon... many of them also sport dual connectors (USB-C and USB-A).
Also: "Flash Drives" are soooo 2000's of you... just use Dropbox... ;-)
Any time I am using my laptop for work, I need Ethernet, HDMI, 2xUSB-A, and power. I lived with the compromise with the Air by having Ethernet dongles everywhere and not using it as my primary workstation in the office-- so I could have the portability. If this is where Apple is going, the pay really don't have a product for me anymore. I don't want to travel with a dock that needs an external power brick.
Inductive charging is horribly inefficient and it would be a huge pain to have to lug your six-foot-radius inductive charging transmitter around with you. So that's out.
Magsafe went away on the Macbook because the designers did a bunch of testing and realized that the USBC connector yanks out of the socket almost as easily, unless pulled at an angle, and in that case, the Macbook is light enough that it tends to pivot before it gains enough momentum to fall off a desk. That and, everything in the Macbook is solid-state. The risk of damage from tripping over a cord is less, while the risk of damage from dropping it at standing-height was never addressed by magsafe in the first place.
What remains to be seen is, will they refine the design of USB enough that the extra weight of a Pro machine doesn't interfere with cable detachment, and, will they be able to charge a Pro-level battery acceptably fast enough by the USB quick-charge standard. If one or both of those questions come out "no", then you'll be seeing a magsafe connector, or dongle, on your new Macbook Pro.
Your history lesson about Apple removing the floppy drive is just a little bit revisionist. All those devices you mention that eclipsed the 3.5-inch drive really only became usable once the USB standard got entrenched, and the iMac was one of the biggest reasons for that. Remember when ZipDrives needed a special driver, and ran off the parallel port? Or off the SCSI port? Same with SyQuest drives. They were SCSI- or IDE-only for a very long time. What was killing the floppy before the iMac was all those ZipDrives and SyQuests AND the rise of dirt-cheap home and small business LAN hardware, and the ever-cheapening cost of CDs and CDRs. Ubiquitous USB came later. Let's not put the historical cart before the horse ;)
But anyhoo... Thunderbolt. I'm glad you mentioned that. There's some good news on that front: https://www.cnet.com/news/thun...
Don't think of the new MacBook Pro as having a bunch of small-size USB ports, think of it as having a bunch of Thunderbolt 3 ports. That's one port for supplying data in and out, at massive speeds, including multiple displays, and it's daisy-chainable, and it supplies power!! Of course Apple is all over this! What else would they be doing?
That said, if they eliminate the headphone jack, I'm going to have to drive down to Cupertino and slap some people around.
First Apple removes the mic jack, then headphone jack, now USB 1/2/3 and the SD card port.
Next they'll remove the keyboard, the trackpad, the hinge... they're slowly making the Mac INTO an iPad.
Fuck. That. Shit.
And Logitech still doesn't make USB-C type Unifying dongles :-( And using adapter for such thing like a tiny usb dongle is simply stupid idea (because such dongle is meant to be plugged in into laptop and (almost) never taken out).
Well, who needs USB when the device will soon be revealed to have an internal brain interface chip.
Of course, you will need a chip implanted in your own skull to connect. And, incidentally, it will only connect to Apple and also, for medical reasons, it will be impossible to install anybody else's brain interface chips, meaning you will then be committed to Apple for life, and only Apple.
This will not constitute a significant negative to their hardcore base.
Why on gods earth to people still buy printers that need to be plugged in to a computer? Of all the peripherals that you can get for computers the printer is absolutely the one that should be networked. The idea of plugging a printer into a laptop is so retarded it beggars belief. Any such printer is a heap of junk that needs consigning to the trash at the first available opportunity.
I would note that wireless printers are the next stupidest thing imaginable, wire it up to your router for god sake or wireless access point or whatever.
I get removing all the legacy ports. They're not as good! But FFS, only one Type C? That's not right. At minimum, there should be one on each side. On a "pro" laptop, I'd like to see two of them on each side. They're small enough.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
You know a company is going downward when the headlines focus more on the features they're removing from their products rather than the new features they're providing.
I see one major problem with eliminating USB 3.0 ports. Currently there exist very small USB 3.0 sticks (example: Lexar S45) that can fit in the current MacBook Pro and MacBook Air laptops and increase the total storage capacity. These drives are so small that it's not necessary to plug them out when carrying the laptop around in a backpack, a fact that makes this setup an attractive way to save hundreds of dollars that would be necessary for buying a laptop with a 256 GB SSD instead of 128 GB let's say. The USB stick can be used to store music and photos for example, without affecting the overall perceived speed of the machine. There is no equivalent solution with USB-C AFAIK.
Really!
I'm wondering because I've heard much of military (not sure if entire DoD) prohibits USB sticks. Also many companies warn their employees to not insert USB sticks into company computers including personal because don't know if the stick contains bugs. Maybe get rid of USB and be done with that problem. What bugs me are many systems not on the internet and also optical media is being phased out.
Yes, the old story of a bank that had security seminar of scammers that dump USB sticks in parking lots, tempting employees to pick them up and insert into computers. Then the next day bank IT security people do a test by dumping sticks in parking lots, and find that half the seminar attendees took and inserted the stick into their computers!
mfwright@batnet.com
Its perfect for apple users. You all buy a new one when the battery runs out anyways right?
Part of the reason for Thunderbolt not really taking off is the extreme cost of anything using it.
USB isn't old school, almost every peripheral and accessory uses it, one way or another. What a Mac fanboy heading.