Skip to main content

Apple may have just killed this 16-year old Mac product

CD in a CD drive on a Macbook Pro.
Chris Yates / Unsplash
Sold out Apple SuperDrive screenshot.
Apple

After first going out of stock in the U.S. and later in every country in the world, people (and MacRumors) are beginning to assume the 16-year-old Apple SuperDrive isn’t coming back. The company hasn’t said anything about it officially, but many of its current customers probably don’t know or remember that it exists or is still sold.

When the first MacBook Air launched in 2008, its big selling point was the same as it is now — it’s superthin and light. Getting the size down to fit in a Manila envelope meant removing lots of ports, and that included the disc drive. It felt like a pretty bold move at the time. After all, how would you download software? Or what if you needed to burn a mix CD for your high school crush?

Recommended Videos

Well, to give people the option to still play CDs and DVDs on their Macs, Apple released a stand-alone disc drive called the SuperDrive. It uses a USB-A connector, which was fine at the time of release, but if you wanted to use one now, you’d have to buy a USB-C to USB-A adapter as well. It’s also too old to be compatible with Blu-ray discs, so it really is quite out of date.

Of course, USB ports aren’t the only thing that has changed over the past 16 years. Physical media like DVDs have become a bit of a niche in the age of streaming and digital downloads. This transition is likely why Apple never upgraded the SuperDrive to USB-C, and ultimately why it’s now disappeared from the Apple Store now.

So, let’s pour one out for the SuperDrive, a unique solution to an innovation that took us one step closer to where we are today.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
The new Mac mini may be almost as small as the Apple TV
The Apple TV 4K standing vertically with the Apple logo showing from the front

Apple is planning a new version of the Mac mini using the M4 chip, according to reports from Bloomberg. It's expected sometime before the end of the year, and insider information suggests that it will be significantly smaller than the previous generation -- almost as small as the Apple TV box. This will be the first significant redesign of the product since it was overhauled in 2010 under late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

It seems there will be two versions of the new Mac mini, one with the standard M4 chip and one with an M4 Pro chip that has yet to be announced. Like other Pro chips, it's expected that the M4 Pro will support additional memory and enhanced graphic performance.

Read more
A ‘dramatic’ Mac redesign may launch later this year
Disney Plus on a MacBook Pro.

Would it be a surprise if you found out that Apple is planning to release new Macs later this year? Probably not, as we tend to get at least a handful of new Mac models most years. But what is more unexpected is the recently proposed idea that at least one “dramatic” redesign is on the way -- and we might already have an inkling of which Macs will get this special treatment.

This idea comes from Bloomberg journalist Mark Gurman. Writing in the paid-for section of his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman says that Apple will bring out a range of new Macs in 2024 and 2025, giving almost the entire range a welcome refresh. This year we’ll see new versions of the MacBook Pro, iMac and Mac mini, Gurman says. Following that, the MacBook Air, Mac Studio and Mac Pro will be updated in 2025. Interestingly, that directly contradicts the recently floated possibility that the M4 MacBook Pro might have been pushed back to next year.

Read more
Did Apple just hint that the M4 MacBook Pro isn’t coming in 2024?
Apple MacBook Pro 16 downward view showing keyboard and speaker.

Apple held its third-quater earnings call this week, and it looks like things went pretty well overall. Total revenue was $85 billion, up around 5% year-over-year, and the Mac managed to go up 2% year-over-year as well, bringing in just over $7 billion. But a comment from the Q&A section of the call suggests that the company isn't expecting any bumps in Mac revenue for the rest of the year and, as MacRumors suggests, this could be code for "no new MacBook."

After being pressed for clarification on product revenue expectations for the September quarter, Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri commented:

Read more