So basically my new $9,000 MacPro is now basically end of life, why would Apple even release this computer knowing that they were moving away from Intel, clearly they have been working on this transition for a few years. Very annoyed.
They probably won't sell an Apple silicone Mac Pro until the end of the transition, maybe two years from now. Since most Mac Pro buyers are using them to earn a living, that's two years of real work that you can do before the new one lands. And, of course, apple will continue to support the current Mac Pro with both software updates and service for far longer than that. So I'm not sure I see the problem.
So basically my new $9,000 MacPro is now basically end of life, why would Apple even release this computer knowing that they were moving away from Intel, clearly they have been working on this transition for a few years. Very annoyed.
And remember how much use many of us in this section of the forum (let alone the PPC/Vintage guys) are still getting very good use of MPs 1,1 to 5,1.
T2 is hardly that restrictive. Disable the Secure Boot functionality, once, and you're done. And it wouldn't prevent Win 10 being installed anyway.Yes and we love the old MPs because they are X86-64 powered OPEN systems and able to run Windows and Linux out of the Box or inside a VM (without any restrictive "security chip").
Sorry, but no way would I want a first gen ARM MacPro. My 2019 MacPro will be my powerhouse for the next 4-5 years.
T2 is hardly that restrictive. Disable the Secure Boot functionality, once, and you're done. And it wouldn't prevent Win 10 being installed anyway.
It's actually more restrictive than I thought. I installed Catalina to an "external" hard drive being a Samsung 970 Evo Plus mated to a PCIE card. I then wiped clean the internal Apple SSD to serve as my Media drive.
I couldn't go back into the Startup Security Utility under the Recovery procedure when I wanted to change the security settings. Apple Tech Support could not figure out why and only advised me to restore/revive the T2 chip.
The actual solution is to boot back into the Apple SSD and thereby keep a copy of the OS in there just so you can access the Startup Security Utility. The implementation of the T2 chip is too restrictive such that you can't log in that Utility without having an Apple SSD which should not be tied to the T2 chip once you determine you don't need that drive to act as the OS.
This has to be investigated...There's no Apple kill-switch to make you buy a new one.