I understand your point and respectfully disagree 100%.
I have owned ever Mac tower since the G4 and am very disappointed with this iteration. Apple took away functionality yet raised the base-line price.
Yes, the top of the line 2023 MacPro is far cheaper than even a mid-grade 2019, but that’s not the big issue. The issue is what to you get for it? A Studio with PCIe? That’s not what we want. We want a Mac Pro in the truest sense of the name. We want:
1. A customizable machine that can be outfitted based on individual needs. You can’t do that without ram and GPU options.
2. A machine that has a universally better / faster chipset than available anywhere else. The MacPro was once advertised as the fastest computer on the market. Now it is just the fastest MacPro.
3. Prior to 2019, the MacPro was reasonably priced as a high end Mac. Now it is priced to push people away from it.
4. There are other issues too: the displays cannot be connected to a PCIe card. So no matter how you configure this, your stuck using thunderbolt for displays.
There are benefits to the Mac Pro such as two additional thunderbolt ports and the ability to add USB 3 / 4 data ports via PCIe. And, unlike the 2019, each thunderbolt port has its own controller, so, in essence, while you have a few less thunderbolt ports than in 2019, your getting nearly double the controllers.
Also, the media encoder, Afterburner, is a separate section of the SOC and therefore doesn’t use (much) processing power allowing for significant multi-tasking.
My take is that Apple was taking crap for the delays and came out with an M2 Mac Pro to satisfy that. I hope that the M3 MacPro will fix, or at least address, the very understandable criticism.