

That means that some older products, which continued to be sold, stay around for longer as supported products since someone could conceivably have bought them on the last day they were for sale. Some products are phased out quicker than others. If you’re wondering why this spans such a wide range of years, it’s probably because - as noted - it’s based on when Apple stopped selling them, not when they launched.

Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod, and Apple TV vintage products continue to receive hardware service from Apple service providers, including Apple Retail Stores, subject to availability of inventory, or as required by law.” Joining Apple’s obsolete listĪlong with the 5K iMacs, the late 2013, 21.5-inch iMac, late 2013, 27-inch iMac, 21.5-inch mid-2014 iMac, and mid-2015 5K, 27-inch iMacs have entered the vintage list. “Vintage products are those that have not been sold for more than 5 and less than 7 years ago. Now, six years later, they’re nearing the end of their natural life. The computer is a late 2013 iMac with an NVIDIA GeForce GT 755M graphics card. I have a second thunderbolt port, so I was wondering if its possible to also use a thunderbolt enabled 3440x1440 monitor, maybe like the LG 34UM95C. At the time, these Macs looked positively futuristic. Currently Im running an external 27' 2560x1440 apple cinema display from the thunderbolt port.
