Whether you're attempting to support Engadget's comments, criticize them, or make a bad joke, take note that the MBA SuperDrive is silver anodized aluminum, not glossy white plastic.
They can make whatever color they want (although white never looks good on a non-apple product). Thing is, THEIR DESCRIPTION SPEC IS WRONG! There is no such thing as a 20X slimline drive, and when you look at their own media spec for DVD-R they only mention 8x write speed.
All optical drives require >800mAH therefore this drive breaks USB spec (which limits 500mAH).
The only way to do this without breaking spec and possibly shutting down your PC when you plug it in is this way (Li-Ion Battery integrated in for supplemental power) http://www.slidirect.com/product40-129.html
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
Nobody is allowed to make a white slot-loading external anymore. Only Apple, otherwise you're RIPPING THEM OFF! Thieves!
yes, I realize it is cool to hate apple, or anyone who supports apple,
but there is more likeness than the slot loading.
it looks exactly the same.
even a color other than *white* would have made this go over better.
and yes, i know there is a black option.
I swear to God engadget keeps proving it's allowing retards to write their stories.
Whether you're attempting to support Engadget's comments, criticize them, or make a bad joke, take note that the MBA SuperDrive is silver anodized aluminum, not glossy white plastic.
They can make whatever color they want (although white never looks good on a non-apple product). Thing is, THEIR DESCRIPTION SPEC IS WRONG! There is no such thing as a 20X slimline drive, and when you look at their own media spec for DVD-R they only mention 8x write speed.
All optical drives require >800mAH therefore this drive breaks USB spec (which limits 500mAH).
The only way to do this without breaking spec and possibly shutting down your PC when you plug it in is this way (Li-Ion Battery integrated in for supplemental power) http://www.slidirect.com/product40-129.html
I'd agree. I don't think a slot loading superdrive took a lot of R&D either, in any case.