Something to do with his Jimmie I think. Maybe he wanted you to rustle his Jimmie? IDK
See this, if it's still of interest : http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/that-really-rustled-my-jimmies
Something to do with his Jimmie I think. Maybe he wanted you to rustle his Jimmie? IDK
Care to explain why you think they are similar in function?
Did you bother to look at the documentation provided by the developers of UnRAID and BeyondRAID? If you did you would have seen that they are in fact dissimilar in how they function.
I'm a pro user for sure, had a Mac Pro since 2006. Everyone is having their jimmies rustled over this and that, from the case to the upgradability. Okay, some of that is valid.
But are there any other pro's who just want to buy it, plug in their 2-3-4 thunderbolt displays, and not worry about anything? I know there are the neckbeards who will never be happy with apple, but I for one can't wait to plop my cylinder down by my monitors and just forget it's there.
unRAID is not a traditional raid either. The means by which both platforms write and manage data may differ. In functionality and usage, however, they are not dissimilar.
The existing Mac Pro has support for the 5870
But yeah, there are a bunch of people apparently willing to gnash their teeth and pull their hair over the new design. I maintain that almost all of that is because of two reasons. One being that there's not enough information available yet so they're only seeing a partial picture and the other is that they lack certain mental facilities such as logical problem solving. A ridiculous example of the later being the inability to imagine the various ways in which external storage can be attached. Some folks are just dim - I guess that has always been true and will continue to be.
And of course "almost all" indeed implies that there will be a few venders and end-users disenfranchised by the new design. But it's far less than what is being professed by the wingnuts here and in the blogs. Mainly it will be vendors who specialize in VAR style GPU sales and users who... umm, errr, uhh, well actually I can't think of any.
[*]People who want more CPU cores?
[*]People who want Game level GPUs?
[*]People using fast external RAID storage?
[*]People using unusual PCIe cards?
Before I plug in monitors I will have to mortgage my home for adapter dongles and external chassis'. Then I can plug in and enjoy. And plug...and plug...and...where's that picture of the Dell cables mess next to the iMac? It will probably OK in the end but will take time and money to retrofit all peripherals to work. And then hope this is not another 'cube'. Eradicated 1-2 years from release. Cause hey, screw me, right?
That image is comparing an iMac to a Desktop. The Mac Pro has nothing to do with that so there is no full circle.
Apart from now, the Mac Pro has way more cords than the PC desktop (provided you have any TB/USB devices, like an optical drive, hard drives, PCIe chassis).
The Mac Pro is a workstation class computer and is not in the same class as a PC desktop. It is not uncommon for workstation class computers to have external audio/video devices and DAS. Apple realized this and designed the new Mac Pro accordingly.
Where did you find the final specs of the new Mac Pro? You know, those specs Apple still hasn't made public. Or in other words: there is no certainty the Mac Pro uses that W9000 nor is there any certainty that it will solely use that W9000. All we know is that whatever got demoed looks like to be housing that W9000. Let's not forget that anything we are doing now is pure speculation. It may very well be that Apple continuous to sell different types of Mac Pros as they are doing now. Meaning, you can get lower power graphics and thus a cheaper Mac Pro (same applies to the CPU). We'll have to wait till they finally release it.With this one, you're forced to buy 2 fireGL cards regardless of if you'd like to have a cheaper configuration better suited for your needs.
Nominated for post of the week!. Thanks for this!
People always want more cores. I don't, but I don't require a workstation-level motherboard for my purposes, either, nor do I pay workstation prices. If I did, perhaps I'd expect dual processor capability. Apple is going to enter the Xeon workstation arena without dual processors at least as an option. Maybe the MP wont be priced as such, but I expect that it will, and it'll be a joke.
Hopefully the new Ivy bridge has a 12 core model and not a 6 actual + 6 virtual. I think most users aren't bothered by this, but it will deter some from purchasing the machine.
Some people would prefer to pay the rather small sum to get a gaming GPU and then boot into Windows for games. This as opposed to paying for dual fireGL cards which are ridiculously expensive. The w9000 are $3,300 each and are only as good as a 7970 ($370) for games.
Apple has taken options away from us to put the computer in a ridiculous form-factor that nobody asked for.
If, by some miracle, they manage to price the new MP with dual w9000 for < $4,000, I will be impressed. However, I'm guessing that if they even offer a model like that, it's going to be > $7,000.
Internal 6gbps SATA would have been identical in speed for a fraction of the overhead cost (pop in another drive, no need for an external enclosure).
As far as your options list, SAS over 8x PCIe is better than thunderbolt, and costs the same (you pay for the controller, less for the enclosure).
http://www.barefeats.com/tbolt01.html
Image
Thunderbolt RAID 0 with 6Gb/s SSDs appears to run into a bottleneck when you compare it to the SAS RAID 0 with the same 6Gb/s SSDs. I guess the 1000+MB/s theoretical bandwidth is... theoretical.-Barefeats
Unusual like my $150 eSATA card that runs my 10 hard drive array I built for less than $300?
Is it unusual to not want to pay $1000 for a thunderbolt array?
I like your posts, dude, but this design is going to cost users hundreds if not thousands of dollars to get the same capabilities as a $2500 PC.
By the way, how's that headphone jack working out for you? How many hundreds of dollars will it take to get surround sound on your $3,000+ computer?
And at least you didn't mention putting another GPU in a Thunderbolt --> PCIe adapter; that has to be one of the most absurd arguments I've heard.
Where did you find the final specs of the new Mac Pro?
What, over three grand per card?
Not nobody. In fact it's a popular complaint. I can't begin to count the number of times I read something similar to: "I'm getting two MacMinis because the MacPro is too big" or "I wanted the MP but opted for an iMac cuz the MP is just too big, bla bla bla" and so many variants thereof.
What? No. Or explain how tooling, assembly, and parts for controller, backplane, cage & sliders, cables and etc. somehow beat the price of what we see in the MP at he TB2 speeds - about 2 gigabytes per second.
Again, no. TB2 should be capable of speeds approaching 2GB/s - that's faster than the SAS shown in that graph. And again much cheaper ta'boot.
You're just looking at initial prices is all. Remember that TB is real new.
I think for sure using such a setup for displaying graphics is kinda silly tho.
But are there any other pro's who just want to buy it, plug in their 2-3-4 thunderbolt displays, and not worry about anything?
The W6000 is only $330 IIRC, I'm sure they'll have a few different options.
How about having this computer for those people, and everyone else can use a tower ?![]()
I was talking about SATA drives being run through TB. There's very little difference in speed between most decent motherboard SATA controllers and TB sata controllers, they both max out.
SATA will be around for many years, especially for platter drives (which will also be around for a while).
I'll wait to see the benchmarks![]()
I'm not saying TB is slower than anything (except PCIe), I'm saying that while useful, it's not a replacement for PCIe yet.
It says right there that there are small parts included with that model that could be choking hazards to small children. Are you crazy? That's why I bought the tower in the first place--out of fear of choking on a Mac Mini!@
Apart from now, the Mac Pro has way more cords than the PC desktop (provided you have any TB/USB devices, like an optical drive, hard drives, PCIe chassis).