Developers paid $500 to use the DTK for a few months.
Is Apple giving them back $200 or $700?
$200
Apple is now saying 'you are contractually obligated to ship back this DTK and when we receive it you will receive $200 store credit to buy a new M1 Mac which expires on May 31 if unused.'
They didn't pay $500 to buy them. They paid $500 for a time-limited rental. You can argue that the price was too steep for a loan, or that Apple should be offering a more generous incentive to return the hardware. I wouldn't disagree. [2] But it's not like Apple was unclear about this.[0][1]
[2] To everyone who dealt with faulty hardware, I think Apple should be quietly offering refunds, not just a partial store credit. But to everyone else, they received the service promised by Apple in full and should be stoked at the $200 return incentive.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 30.4 ms ] threadIs Apple giving them back $200 or $700?
$200
Apple is now saying 'you are contractually obligated to ship back this DTK and when we receive it you will receive $200 store credit to buy a new M1 Mac which expires on May 31 if unused.'
If the participant has already purchased an M1 Mac and doesn't need another one, then they get nothing.
And the store credit isn't given until after the DTK is returned.
[0] https://photos5.appleinsider.com/gallery/36365-67564-DTK-own...
[1] https://miro.medium.com/max/1400/1*V6If2OIL4W223oGLzT5OrQ.pn...
[2] To everyone who dealt with faulty hardware, I think Apple should be quietly offering refunds, not just a partial store credit. But to everyone else, they received the service promised by Apple in full and should be stoked at the $200 return incentive.
Because the DTK was handled completely differently by Apple during the PowerPC to Intel transition.