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You won't be able to upgrade to the next gen since you're stuck by the design choice that Apple made.
What design choice exactly is that?
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You won't be able to upgrade to the next gen since you're stuck by the design choice that Apple made.
What design choice exactly is that?
I thought you referred to the next generation CPUs and I wasn't quite sure what Apple did there.
Well, you know this but probably forgot. When you decide to upgrade your PC MB you will find out that your old CPU is no longer supported and you need a new CPU and with that new memory to go along. After a while you will realise that your GPU is too slow and doesn't really match your new MB/CPU/Memory and you will probably upgrade that as well.
Oh...almost forgot the new MB/CPU requires end user beta testing (BIOS) and an addition 12Vxx line that your old power supply doesn't have and you need to upgrade the PS too. BIOS Version 8938 appears to be stable will be soon available for testing.
It's great to upgrade and tinker around for some people that enjoy just the process itself, run benchmarks all day long and overclock this and overclock that together with the latest registry hacks to find an extra 5% performance - this can be fun but I really don't think these are primary reasons someone decides to buy a Mac.![]()
That is quite an impressive number of PCs you manage. How many of those will you upgrade the MB/CPU and how many will you just replace when the time comes?...
.... I manage a park of about 25k PCs and haven't come across a bios problem for quite a while.
I don't have it, as I set my MP up in mid-2012.Just looked at the Addonics link. Cool. Do you have this set up in your MP? How is the performance? Am imagining four of the Samsung mSATA SSDs in RAID 0...![]()
I thought you referred to the next generation CPUs and I wasn't quite sure what Apple did there.
Well, you know this but probably forgot. When you decide to upgrade your PC MB you will find out that your old CPU is no longer supported and you need a new CPU and with that new memory to go along. After a while you will realise that your GPU is too slow and doesn't really match your new MB/CPU/Memory and you will probably upgrade that as well.
Oh...almost forgot the new MB/CPU requires end user beta testing (BIOS) and an addition 12Vxx line that your old power supply doesn't have and you need to upgrade the PS too. BIOS Version 8938 appears to be stable will be soon available for testing.
It's great to upgrade and tinker around for some people that enjoy just the process itself, run benchmarks all day long and overclock this and overclock that together with the latest registry hacks to find an extra 5% performance - this can be fun but I really don't think these are primary reasons someone decides to buy a Mac.![]()
That is quite an impressive number of PCs you manage. How many of those will you upgrade the MB/CPU and how many will you just replace when the time comes?
Note that the chipset used in the mentioned card only allows 2x PCIe speed, so four MSATA drives will theoretically more than max out the card. I still like the approach though.
You're the one being obtuse and moving the goal post.
You won't be able to upgrade to the next gen since you're stuck by the design choice that Apple made.
Let's get the facts straight... Typically no Mac or PC can be upgraded to a newer generation of CPU thanks to Intel constantly changing the socket which necessitates a new main-board. The nMP and Apples design of it, is no different than any other Ivy Bridge computer in that regard.
On the other hand you can upgrade the CPU to others of the current generation and again, this no different than any other Intel platform.
I've read that PCI 2.0, 2x is the max throughput of the controller on the card.Do you mean PCIe 2.0? AFAIK the PCIe specification (whether 1.x, 2.x, 3.0 or 4.0) only allows for x1, x4, x8, and x16 lanes.
I went with the hackintosh route myself. Could write a ton about it, but here is the main things.
I've read that PCI 2.0, 2x is the max throughput of the controller on the card.
That is quite an impressive number of PCs you manage. How many of those will you upgrade the MB/CPU and how many will you just replace when the time comes?
I wouldn't say constantly... We got a pretty good run with the sockets presently used.
And there is a difference compared to a PC in that you can replace the mobo in the PC.