

ACMI is not available for purchases made online at special storefronts. See the Apple Card Customer Agreement for more information. Taxes and shipping are not included in ACMI and are subject to your card’s variable APR. * Monthly pricing is available when you select Apple Card Monthly Installments (ACMI) as payment type at checkout at Apple, and is subject to credit approval and credit limit. iPhone activation required on iPhone purchases made at an Apple Store with one of these national carriers: AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile. ACMI is not available for purchases made online at the following special stores: Apple Employee Purchase Plan participating corporate Employee Purchase Programs Apple at Work for small businesses Government, and Veterans and Military Purchase Programs, or on refurbished devices. If you choose the pay-in-full or one-time-payment option for an ACMI-eligible purchase instead of choosing ACMI as the payment option at checkout, that purchase will be subject to the variable APR assigned to your Apple Card. Variable APRs for Apple Card other than ACMI range from 15.49% to 26.49% based on creditworthiness.

See for more information about eligible products. to select at checkout for certain Apple products purchased at Apple Store locations,, the Apple Store app, or by calling 1-800-MY-APPLE, and is subject to credit approval and credit limit. I was inadvertently sent a panel for a later MacBook (2008) and while it physically fit and the LVDS connectors were compatible, the panel simply didn't work.◊ Apple Card Monthly Installments (ACMI) is a 0% APR payment option available only in the U.S. I recently replaced the LCD in a Mid-2007 MacBook (white) and it was imperative that I replace it with a compatible panel. For this, you need to (unfortunately) disassemble the display and get the LCD panel model off the back. Neither have the actual panel info model because that's typically not put in by the display manufacturer. Using the ioreg command to get EDID $ ioreg -lw0 -r -c "IODispla圜onnect" -n "display0" -d 2 | grep IODisplayEDID | sed "/*
Resolution: 2560 x 1440 (QHD/WQHD - Wide Quad High Definition)įramebuffer Depth: 24-Bit Color (ARGB8888)

Using the system_profiler command: $ system_profiler SPDisplaysDataType The model number for the panel was "LM270WQ1" where as the Apple PN# was "661-7169." Those numbers aren't present in any of the EDID data. Unfortunately, you cannot get the LCD panel model number from the command line as it's not stored in firmware as part of the monitor's EDID.įor example, I had to replace the the LCD of my 27" iMac due to an unfortunate incident involving a disobedient child and a fidget spinner.
