Apple has only announced macs in November once, and that was last year. Not enough info to say if they will continue to do so going forward, or if this was a necessity due to covid and scheduling.Apple usually now announces new Macs in Novernber for the Christmas Season!
maybe contact Prosser???Will someone please post some credible rumors about when the next Apple Event will be and tell me it will include the Mac Pro? I am suffering from a long-term lack-of-an-ARM Mac Pro withdrawal symptoms and desperately want a new one. The only known cure is a new machine!
You could try sending an email to:Will someone please post some credible rumors about when the next Apple Event will be and tell me it will include the Mac Pro? I am suffering from a long-term lack-of-an-ARM Mac Pro withdrawal symptoms and desperately want a new one. The only known cure is a new machine!
The next Apple event will be October 19, and will not include the mac proWill someone please post some credible rumors about when the next Apple Event will be and tell me it will include the Mac Pro? I am suffering from a long-term lack-of-an-ARM Mac Pro withdrawal symptoms and desperately want a new one. The only known cure is a new machine!
Oct 19 hmm ?The next Apple event will be October 19, and will not include the mac pro
@cmaier is the resident expert in CPU design, he is VERY credible ...Oct 19 hmm ?
Yes, being an expert in one thing makes me an expert in all things.@cmaier is the resident expert in CPU design, he is VERY credible ...
let m know how I can help ...Yes, being an expert in one thing makes me an expert in all things.
It’s a burden, really…
Apple will need to extend the Apple Silicon designs as far as it can to meet the needs of the Mac Pro. It will be very interesting to see how to address large amounts of RAM and multiple fast GPUs. Can they do it all on SOC like the M1 or will they be forced to split those out into separate units? Will they support user upgradable RAM? Will they support third party GPUs. Those are all big unanswered questions. The chips for the Mac Pros are likely to be very different than the ones for the low end Macs or even the prosumer Macs like the MBP or the iMac biggie.Will someone please post some credible rumors about when the next Apple Event will be and tell me it will include the Mac Pro? I am suffering from a long-term lack-of-an-ARM Mac Pro withdrawal symptoms and desperately want a new one. The only known cure is a new machine!
Apple will need to extend the Apple Silicon designs as far as it can to meet the needs of the Mac Pro. It will be very interesting to see how to address large amounts of RAM and multiple fast GPUs. Can they do it all on SOC like the M1 or will they be forced to split those out into separate units? Will they support user upgradable RAM? Will they support third party GPUs. Those are all big unanswered questions. The chips for the Mac Pros are likely to be very different than the ones for the low end Macs or even the prosumer Macs like the MBP or the iMac biggie.
Expect that to be the very last machine that Apple updates to the new chips. You will see all of the other Mac on Apple Silicon first. Once that happens, you can reasonably start looking for Mac Pros on the horizon.
I assume they will continue with the unified memory design ? If the memory is on the cpu chiplet, and the gpu is on a different chiplet, does this have a lot of performance implications ?I will answer the unanswered questions.
1)they could do it all on a single SoC the size of TSMC’s reticle, but they won’t. Instead they will use a multi-chip module, in order to provide multiple configurations.
2) they will probably not support user upgradeable RAM.
3) they will definitely not support third party GPUs, but they already have a discrete GPU ready to go, which will live in the MCM.
I assume they will continue with the unified memory design ? If the memory is on the cpu chiplet, and the gpu is on a different chiplet, does this have a lot of performance implications ?
Hence your reasoning that apple won’t support third party gpu as they use their own memory ?Some. It increases latency, but that can be compensated for by faster or wider buses, more cache, etc. Unified memory will continue -it’s now the apple way.
Hence your reasoning that apple won’t support third party gpu as they use their own memory ?
Does this design mean that all cpu and memory have to be on one chiplet ? If you have two chiplet each with their own cpu/ memory then don’t you have a lot of hassle if a cpu on one chiplet wants to access the memory on the other ? Ie does it become a non unified model ?
So one possible design would be to move all the gpu and neural engine etc to one chiplet and cram the other chiplet with cpu and memory ? But this will limit the total amount of memory .. ie you won’t get a 64Gb memory chip for the next few years ?
I would think AS Mac Pros will sport ECC DDR5 DIMM slots, with 512-bits data busses.2) they will probably not support user upgradeable RAM.
I would think AS Mac Pros will sport ECC DDR5 DIMM slots, with 512-bits data busses.