Honestly, this has now been discussed in like 6 different threads, lol
I, too, can remember that this has been discussed frequently, but of course I can't remember the URLs of these threads. So perhaps OP can just use the search function himself? Not that anybody outside of Apple knows what the next Mac Pro will look like and what kind of GPU it will have and support.It would be helpful if you could reference those specific threads since the poster didn't see them.
I believe the consensus of those threads was thread was that it wouldn't make sense to give up the advantages of integrated GPUs and unified memory. In other words, they could probably design such a chip but it would be a stupid idea.Could Apple design a chip without an integrated GPU that could work with discrete GPUs inside of the next Mac Pro?
AFAIK the only thing stopping discrete GPUs “working“ on Apple Silicon is the lack of OS support and drivers - not trivial to fix, but feasible. That would lose the performance advantages of unified RAM shared directly between the GPU and CPU and a GPU optimised specifically for Metal - so I don‘t think there’s much demand for hanging a mid-range external GPU off a Mac Studio (with bandwidth limited by Thunderbolt).Could Apple design a chip without an integrated GPU that could work with discrete GPUs inside of the next Mac Pro?
The Mac Studio seems to be the zenith of what can be made with an integrated SoC Apple chip. How an Apple Silicon-powered Mac Pro will be faster than the Mac Studio AND the competition while offering RAM or PCI Express expandability beyond the Mac Studio are the big questions.The question is, though, would a Mac Pro centred on 3rd party GPUs like that be worth Apple’s while? It wouldn’t really offer anything that an Intel/AMD x86 system didn’t and it’s performance would be determined by the same GPUs you could choose for an x86 system. Youre throwing away the ASI advantages of tight OS/hardware integration, unified RAM - and low power consumption isn’t really a selling point on a full tower workstation (esp. when the GPUs will be pulling enough power to boil a kettle). What Apple Silicon is good at is laptops and small-form-factor systems.
That would lose the performance advantages of unified RAM shared directly between the GPU and CPU and a GPU optimised specifically for Metal
Problem is, the 2019 Mac Pro used a Xeon chip with a massive 64 lanes of PCIe which could support multiple, high-end GPUs in full-width 16 lane slots.
I was going with https://www.intel.com/content/www/u...ssor-38-5m-cache-2-50-ghz/specifications.html which says "64" - but that might just be the direct processor lanes. Anyway, your figure of "a metric donkey load" is adequate precision for this discussionNot to be that guy but the Mac Pro but if I remember off the top of my head, its 92 Lanes, 32 of which (the MPX slots) have direct CPU access whereas the rest are behind the bridge, as not all PCIe slots are equal. It's still a metric assload.
It's 64 lanes. 2 x 16x lane via direct ports to the CPU. another 2 x 16x lanes via a PCIE switch fabric that you can allocate lanes to via the PCIE expansion utility.Not to be that guy but the Mac Pro but if I remember off the top of my head, its 92 Lanes, 32 of which (the MPX slots) have direct CPU access whereas the rest are behind the bridge, as not all PCIe slots are equal. It's still a metric assload.
Can we just take a second to reiterate, that the "performance advantage" of Apple Silicon integrated GPU is in the form of a $10k top of the range Mac Studio being spanked by a sub $1000 off-the-shelf card in a 12 year old "obsolete" computer.
if they can, I would prefer to see some type of custom external module that can connect to the mac pro, studio or macbookpro via TB.
You do lose some bandwidth but my experience with an egpu on a PC [and the intel i9 MBP] has been good.
"Top-end" M1 Ultra Mac Studio is US$8K, not US$10K...
Did I specify USD?
because I think the Mac pro as you know it is dead."Top-end" M1 Ultra Mac Studio is US$8K, not US$10K...
Why would you hook a GPU up via TB if it is for a Mac Pro, just use the proper PCIe slot and lose zero bandwidth...?
Right, because a USD$8k computer being spanked by a $1k GPU on the specific graphics metric for which the computer is allegedly optimised, is a completely different situation to how things would be if the computer was USD$10k.Considering Apple is a company based in the United States of America, and they set initial pricing on the US dollar, it would seem only natural for discussion on Mac pricing (especially on a forum that is also US-based) to be US$-centric; maybe clarify which currency you are referencing in the future...
Can we just take a second to reiterate, that the "performance advantage" of Apple Silicon integrated GPU is in the form of a $10k top of the range Mac Studio being spanked by a sub $1000 off-the-shelf card in a 12 year old "obsolete" computer.
You raise a good point. Since Apple Silicon's forte is performance per watt, Apple might be better off selling smaller computers like laptops and Mac Studios where Apple Silicon is competitive rather than Enterprise-class desktops where Apple Silicon is less competitive....unless you are running the sort of task for which it actually makes sense to buy a Mac...
However, trying to emulate the Xeon-W in a "big box 'o' slots" format probably isn't a good use of the tech.
Machines like the MBP and Studio are a much better use of the strengths of Apple Silicon - I'm not sure it makes sense trying to turn it into something it isn't.
It looks like you already said last Sunday the same thing I just wrote. I really enjoy your analysis. Thanks for sharing!You raise a good point. Since Apple Silicon's forte is performance per watt, Apple might be better off selling smaller computers like laptops and Mac Studios where Apple Silicon is competitive rather than Enterprise-class desktops where Apple Silicon is less competitive.