Ok. I don’t hate Apple. I just don’t want to buy it. I like the design, I like the simplicity, I like the functionality and the innovations. I don’t like the hype around the brand so much, but that is not reason enough not to buy a MacBook or an iPhone. What I really don’t like is the way Apple takes the piss out of you and tries to sell it back to you for gold.
Here’s the latest bit. My girlfried likes Apple. She has an iMac, and an iPod nano, and now a MacBook. I told her I won’t be able to support her with her computer woes if she uses a Mac, and she agreed, but hell I could have known I have to do it anyway. Reluctantly, but hey.
So. The new MacBook. Actually the old one, as we bought it right before the new ones come out. We ordered it together with a DVI adapter for that mini, non-standard graphics output port they feature. Well, the adapter we ordered was the one that popped up when we put the MacBook into the basket at the online apple store. Which was the one we got, too. Only that was a Mikro-DVI-to-DVI Adapter, which only the MacBook Air uses. And no, since we deliberately ordered and opened it (after 2 weeks when we intended to use it, only to find out we couldn’t), Apple would not take it back. That’s the first screw you experience: if you chose to avoid using standards as much as possible, at least give them distinguishable names and work over you online store!

So we sold the wrong adapter for about 50 cents at ebay and bought a new Mini-DVI-to-DVI adapter. Remember, that’s 30 SFR (or US$) each over here. When it got here, it looked fine and off it went with a DVI-to-VGA adapter we had lying around to head for a presentation to give. Alas, the DVI-to-VGA adapter would not fit, and hence the projector could not be connected!

Why? Because the Apple DVI adapter is not an integrated DVI adapter (DVI-I) but only DVI-D, which means it only replicates the digital signal and has no jack for the analogue connectors that VGA uses. Hence no adapter fits. Took us a while to find out. Now, of course, you can buy a Mini-DVI-to-VGA adapter for another 30 CHF, because yes, the Mini-DVI port has the analogue signal. So why not replicate all the signals in the DVI adapter as everyone else does?
Quote the apple store customer mucker supporter:
“It obviously is much better to only transmit the signals to be used for the adapter, for DVI that means the digital signal.”
Silently adding:
“Because this way we make sure that not even our adapters will work with anything non-apple and you will have to buy even more of our crap.”
And you know what? They can do it because you all yell “Yay! A customised adapter for every need, all apple-white (or black now) and expensive! Let me buy it!”
Another reason never ever to buy an iPhone. Or an iPod. Or a Macbook. It was close. But I made it. Screw apple. Maybe I do hate them.