Well said.
And this is the second half of the same "Value" question: what's its price going to be?
Looking at just the 'Thunderbolt Tax', based on current price of peripherals ... which IMHO aren't going to change significantly over the next 18 months ... the new would need to retail for roughly $600 less than the old.
-hh
I agree. It's effectively a Xeon based Mac Mini on steroids. I have 2 internal drives on my Mac Mini, 1 SSD I boot from and the original drive I use for general storage and recording to as a tie over till I can obtain an external Firewire drive. I also use a USB 2.0 drive for backup.
With a little planning ahead, I can get myself a drive that's Firewire 800 now but has a Thunderbolt option in the future so when I do get a Mac Pro, all my data will be available from day 1 and I can just migrate everything over and treat it as a turbo charged equivalent to my current system.
My plan all along was get a Mac Mini and then wait and see on the Mac Pro because one day, I'll use the Mac Mini as a media centre and whatever Mac I get next as my main system.
The combined CPU performance and cost is the biggest factor.
I could buy 2 BTO 2.6Ghz Mac Mini's for £1500, move from Pro Tools to Logic X for £140 and then network them together to utilise remote plug-in processing. Each system would be faster than the current entry level Mac Pro and combined would be faster than the current top of the range Mac Pro (for plug-in processing specifically).
For the 2013 Mac Pro to be a viable option, it needs to offer that kind of CPU power with just one system for £1500 or it's yet more form over function smoke and mirrors. If it doesn't offer at least double the CPU power of the 2.6Ghz Mac Mini for a comparable price, it's dead in the water to me from day one.