What exactly is your complaint? That Apple only uses standards that it contributes to? What other computer maker was going to move technology forward?
Should Apple have used the PS/2 connector instead?
> That said, they make moves away from it where they could for protocols they had some level of control and or steering of (FireWire, Thunderbolt, etc).
What were they going to use instead of FireWire? USB 1 was painfully slow. Again what other “standard” should they have used?
There was never a Mac that didn’t have USB after the iMac.
You can go back even further Nubus was licensed from Texas Instruments (used in the Mac II in 1987) and they moved to PCI with the second generation PowerMacs in 1996 (?)
My complaint? I'm just calling into question your counterpoint exampkes supplied when someone stated that Apple only likes standards they control. Whether it's warranted or they have good reason to in some cases is somewhat besides the point, they have a long history of developing their own standards, sonetimes because they are addressing a problem that isn't solved by another technology, and sometimes just because they would rather have something they control whether the market segmentation and user confusion it causes is best for the customer or not.
Should Apple have used the PS/2 connector instead?
> That said, they make moves away from it where they could for protocols they had some level of control and or steering of (FireWire, Thunderbolt, etc).
What were they going to use instead of FireWire? USB 1 was painfully slow. Again what other “standard” should they have used?
There was never a Mac that didn’t have USB after the iMac.
You can go back even further Nubus was licensed from Texas Instruments (used in the Mac II in 1987) and they moved to PCI with the second generation PowerMacs in 1996 (?)