Folks accuse Apple of lack of communications, but occasionally this is not so much Apple not communicating and end users not listening and simply inventing what they 'want to hear'.
What's Apple's latest communication about the forthcoming Mac Pro? Sorry, I must have missed it.
Apple was abundantly and explicitly clear that the Mac Studio was not the "new Mac Pro".
Yes. Don't think I (or anyone else) have claimed otherwise.
It is a replacement for the large screen iMac. Apple explicitly said so, so there is no 'reading of tea leaves " there .
Did they
actually 'explicitly say so'? My recollection is that the 27" iMac was silently discontinued around the same time as the Studio's release, and people just put 2 and 2 together. In any case, I made no comment about the iMac.
From 2006-2019 the Mac Pro didn't much of anything to the large screen iMac plans at Apple. Why would that change now? It is two different product categories.
Sorry, I'm struggling to follow your point here. Between 2006 and 2019, the Mac Pro went through a variety of form factors, including an iMac chassis, along with long periods of being forgotten about.
The iMac/Studio is covering more of the performance zone that the previous decade Mac Pro /PowerMac covered... but that is just relatively the norm across the PC/Computer industry over long term trends that future smaller systems are more capable of doing the work of older larger systems. ( Moore's Law , other tech advances , etc. )
Yes, we're all well aware that computers get faster, and today's iPad kicks the ass of yesterday's tower. What's your point?
If Apple brought back the large screen iMac perhaps that would be a threat to the Mac Studio. But the Mac Pro ... that is just inventing things Apple said exactly the opposite of their strategic direction . So far there are very miniscule signs Apple is trying to bring back the large screen iMac.
Sorry, are you actually replying to someone else? I'm starting to think so, since I never mentioned the iMac, and you keep going on about it.
The Studio display is not a good sign. The apparently delayed but 'higher still, but less than a XDR ' external monitor is an even worse sign (at the very least Apple is waiting on new screen panel tech to make a big move here. No new "this is the long term future" panel ... no iMac. The screen is pretty much a critically essential part of the system.)
Whatever; I never professed to have any interest in the Studio Display. It's terrible value, with its sole distinction, other than typically nice Apple build quality, being 5K resolution.
This line of "confusion Mac Studio / MP " smells more like yet another Apple should do a far more affordable xMac ( $1,000's price range , hyper modular box with slots). If the MP got 'rid' of the Mac Studio , then it would have to lower in price to cover that range. For the last decade, Apple has said 'No' to the xMac. It has been clear (to characterize the communication there hasn't been clear is ludicrous. ) . The switch to Apple Silicon and the Mini Pro and Mac Studio is an even more clear 'No' (to the hyper modularity aspects of the xMac. It is not a "no" to covering most of the performance. )
I didn't invent the rumour that the Studio may be a one-and-done. At this point, the onus is on Apple to show a consistent update schedule for their Pro desktop offerings (which includes the Studio).
The Mac Pro is widely (and uncontroversially) believed to be delayed. The rumour is that the planned 4xMax "Extreme"
chip didn't work out. Unless Apple has something else up their sleeve (which of course they may do), the only other solution
that we know of is the Ultra. At the same time, the Studio is still on M1 whilst almost everything else is on M2. It's reasonable to speculate that if the Mac Pro is forced to make do with an Ultra, they won't want the cheaper Studio competing with it. Hence it might stay on M1 for the foreseeable, or even be discontinued.
To be clear, this is not something I'd relish. I'd like to buy an M2 Max Studio, but I want to know Apple's medium-term desktop strategy first. Something only the release of the Mac Pro will reveal.
It is about function more than form. If Apple just sprinkled 'apple pee' on a reference AMD card it really wouldn't work well with all those XDR and Studio Display and Thunderbolt display monitors that Apple sold. The standard AMD card doesn't have Thunderbolt output. Thunderbolt is pragmatically not proprietary at all. If pass the qualifications can get a "Thunderbolt" logo utilization authorization. ( Intel has to stamp it. And it is single company. ).
Thunderbolt to a Apple monitor is a Mac standard. The whole line up does it. It is inherently a property what being a Mac is at this point. Some Macs have a HDMI video out, but that is really a secondary video out in the Mac ecosystem.
Seems like another own-goal. Perhaps if Apple gave their monitors the ability to connect to DisplayPort in addition to Thunderbolt, they would be more useful all round. Given they use the same connector, and TB is presumably just channelling DP over some of the pins, it wouldn't be a massive stretch.