I do, but it applies evenly to a Hackintosh as well. So in comparing the two, it's not a factor.
bu it doesn't..
In a hackintosh I can upgrade processors and video whenever it plases me and choose whichever processor and video card I please.
I do, but it applies evenly to a Hackintosh as well. So in comparing the two, it's not a factor.
bu it doesn't..
In a hackintosh I can upgrade processors and video whenever it plases me and choose whichever processor and video card I please.
Same is true of my Mac Pro. In fact, mine isn't running the stock video card.
It might be a valid point against something like the iMac, but then we're back to the i7 which I've already talked about.
bu it doesn't..
In a hackintosh I can upgrade processors and video whenever it plases me and choose whichever processor and video card I please.
Oh?
Q1: if you were to go choose an AMD CPU today, it would run under OS X?
If not, then your claim isn't quite as impressive as it sounds: there's some constraints present .. and I'll bet that we can go check out those GPU threads to find out just how constrained the choices are for that component too.
And
Q2: if you were to go upgrade to any CPU/GPU today, the time that it took you to swap out that hardware and verify that it is running properly is literally zero hours, zero minutes and zero seconds?
If not, there is a cost which isn't going to vary significantly between the two sets of hardware (which was the point that goMac was making).
Note: yes, there is an alternative to the 0:00:00 time requirement, namely you can claim that the time investment doesn't matter because you consider the value of your time to be zero.
So if that's going to be your argument, I offer you the opportunity to convince the cynics: stop by my house to perform some menial labor that I'd normally DIY or pay someone to do for me. Fortunately for you, most of the yardwork is currently done, so you have the choice of this week's chores, which includes washing/waxing my german cars (3 of them) or to power-wash and treat the exterior of the house. Of course, if you really wanted to demonstrate how little your time is worth to you, you are free to do both.
BTW, while I do make this offer somewhat humorously, this is serious from the aspect that this work needs to get done, and finding a volunteer who will do it for me for free certainly beats paying someone or even DIY'ing it...and the same exact principle applies to the maintenance of all of my computers too. If its raining outside, you can work inside...dust buildup elimination, backups maintenance, software revision checking, OS updates, hardware maintenance tests, screen colorspace calibrations, printer consumables, etc, etc, etc. Feel free while you're doing this to survey if there's any meaningful difference in touch labor expenses between different machines running the same OS.
-hh
Yes, there are many AMD hackintoshes out there..just check Geekbench
Yes I put a new 550ti in today and it 0 hrs.
Is my time valuable? sure is it a precious and you believe your's is? Obviously not. Do I enjoy the time I spend playing aroud? Yes
Any other points you'd like to make?
Thanks; I didn't know that. Frankly, I find it somewhat surprising.
On the contrary: I used to do DIYs myself, but after 50+ of them, I decided that it was a highly unfun chore, not unlike mowing the lawn. All you're really doing is displaying a common fallacy that's found in these DIY comparisons, namely that the time is considered to be "Free" because the task is considered to be "Fun" (or entertainment).
That's fine for some individuals, but it is not a universal truth that is generalizable to all individuals and their interests.
I'm busy tormorrow (funeral, unfortunately), but just PM me for what time you're going to be able to stop by to do this "Free" stuff on my machines. Afterall, if it is so much "fun" for you, then doing it for free for a stranger can't be a chore, unless it reveals the logical fallacy.
While you're at it, I also remembered that I have an analog control system that needs attention ... and golly, isn't troubleshotting an analog system the very definition of "Fun" for every technologist out there?
-hh
On the contrary: I used to do DIYs myself, but after 50+ of them, I decided that it was a highly unfun chore, not unlike mowing the lawn. All you're really doing is displaying a common fallacy that's found in these DIY comparisons, namely that the time is considered to be "Free" because the task is considered to be "Fun" (or entertainment).
That's fine for some individuals, but it is not a universal truth that is generalizable to all individuals and their interests.
Hackintosh may work for some, but even for me, who used to be an avid custom pc builder and overclocker with a new system every 6 months, it simply isn't going to be an option anymore. Even if it was, you still have to count on Apple to support the drivers of the latest hardware which, if they cancel the MP, future chipsets are always going to be in question.
Maybe Apple will release a MP this year maybe not, but I assume they will still have some product that can be beefed up enough to be tolerable as long as OSX is a must, which in my case it is for now.
I don't ever see Apple licensing OSX out to PC's or even spinning off the Pro line of hardware. I do very much expect to see less and less desktop over the next few years from Apple regardless. I get the impression that just because people enjoy the ipad, that Apple somehow thinks that it should be powerful enough to do whatever, but as nice as the ipad is, it's like going back to 1997 as far as power, memory, capacity, etc. for production work or power users. Apple want us to think otherwise though. I don't get it, and I'm really starting to resent the direction Apple is taking, or more so, their overall attitude in general.
But who's generalizing this to all individuals other than you? You mean not everyone will enjoy building a computer and doing a hack install of the operating system? SHOCKER!
... You're certainly entitled to your opinion and what you do with your time/money is of no concern to me, but quite frankly it makes no sense what so ever to attempt to tell others what they believe their time is worth.
The world has changed: DIY as a relatively common & mainstream applicable activity is dead. Just simply look at what percentage of contemporary hardware sales today are laptops, and if that's not convincing enough, then also factor in just how rarely any PC is opened up anymore.
Fortunately, I've not told them what their time is worth: I've merely illustrated how they may have allowed themselves to be susceptible to a bias which could be influencing their individual opinions.
Including Graphics cards ... a common thread topic in the Mac Pro subforum.
This is why I was surprised when GermanyChris said that there's some Hackintoshes running on AMD ... apparently, I neglected to explicitly state the obvious, which comes down to the old difference between what is possible vs what is practical: the list of options becomes far smaller when the requirements include that a system be as convenient as an OEM Mac: a reinstall merely requires an OEM OS X Install disk and no 3rd Party patches or similar hassles.
In the meantime, given his currently humor-impaired and condescending tone, I don't think he's going to upgrade my Mac ... nor wash my cars.![]()
I hope so too -- especially if the solution is a MP - - but I also recognize that there's been an effective narrowing of the Mac Pro market potential, because of other reasonably viable alternatives.
For example, today's iMac is as powerful as an older Single CPU Mac Pro, so for users whose need for a Mac Pro was more centric to its storage needs can be addressed with a Promise Thunderbolt array on an i7 iMac. Of course, this isn't really any cheaper of a solution ... its mostly just a different set of discrete components being used for that workstation.
Similarly, for high end crunching, various render farm alternatives pop up. It shouldn't be too great of a stretch to suspect that Apple might have a software suite in development that would make this alternative direction a lot easier to employ...particularly if it sells time on an iCloud service.
I also see the decline in desktop, but I think it is more that we've become in part a victim of the success of technology, in conjunction with a lack of new populist "Killer Apps" that are alligned with horsepower.
As such, we see that today's laptops are the 80% Solution (or higher) for the mainstream and as such, they see little reason to need a desktop...in manner of speaking, that missing "Killer App" that people have been searching for for the past five years is mobile, and the consumer is shifting his purchasing habits: over half of all Windows PC sales are laptops and IIRC, the number's something like 70%+ laptops at Apple...and the iPhone and & iPad are the next evolution in this trend, which Steve Jobs sought to label as "Post PC".
Finally, from this Post-PC perspective, with a shift thus occurring, and with the 80% Solution for computing power in place, the product lines of PCs will be under natural pressure to streamline themselves down to fewer hardware solutions. And since at Apple there's less 'commodity' profit margins pressure to provide a bag of different price point products such as is seen at Dell, HP, etc, I'd expect this streamlining trend to occur earlier, not later.
The world has changed: DIY as a relatively common & mainstream applicable activity is dead. Just simply look at what percentage of contemporary hardware sales today are laptops, and if that's not convincing enough, then also factor in just how rarely any PC is opened up anymore.
Fortunately, I've not told them what their time is worth: I've merely illustrated how they may have allowed themselves to be susceptible to a bias which could be influencing their individual opinions.
-hh
but you can't and thats the point
But this is the Mac Pro forum, and we're talking Mac Pros and Xeons here. For that, Hackintosh offers me no advantage besides price, which can be soaked up by the extra time required to deal with Hackintosh specific issues.
Can't what?
Like I said, if you're comparing against an i7 iMac and you need a heavier GPU, Hackintosh could be a better way to go.
But this is the Mac Pro forum, and we're talking Mac Pros and Xeons here. For that, Hackintosh offers me no advantage besides price, which can be soaked up by the extra time required to deal with Hackintosh specific issues.
Can't upgrade the MP in what ever way you choose. You can only use CPU's that were offered for the MP. You're limited by the number on the board. Graphics are if you like to have a life the only thing that really is limited on both.
Read my comment above, my MP started as a 1,1 and ended a 3,1 but I know how much you can play with a MP.
Isn't this true of a Hackintosh as well? I can't upgrade a Core 2 Duo Hackintosh to an i7 Hackintosh without gutting the machine. Same as how I can't upgrade my Core 2 Duo Mac Pro to an i7/Nehelem. Exact same rules apply to both.
I mean, I used to have a Hackintosh (Core Duo) and it couldn't take a Core 2 Duo upgrade.
You can replace anything you want in it. It doesn't sound like you're very familiar with the upgradability of a Mac Pro.
Its nice you think that, and taken by itself you might be right, but its also irrelevant to the point at hand.
No, you did tell him what his time was worth.
You specifically said: "All you're really doing is displaying a common fallacy that's found in these DIY comparisons, namely that the time is considered to be "Free" because the task is considered to be "Fun" (or entertainment). "
You didn't go as far to put a dollar value on it, but you're arguing that it is not "free". Are you really making the nonsensical argument that telling someone that time is not free is not telling them how much their time is worth?
ATX MOBO is not particularly hard to replace, especially compared to the MP logic board I know nothing about. Thats how you upgrade a CD to C2D..
Right, hence my "gut the machine" comment. You can replace the mobo and the RAM and the CPU, but with a Xeon that is so prohibitively expensive that you might as well buy a new machine anyway. (Which is where I got to with my Hackintosh.)
If I'm going to drop $2.5k on upgrades to get the to the next generation CPU, I might as well sell the machine and buy a brand new one. At that point, unless the new CPU is a real solid upgrade, I might as well even stay at the same generation of CPUs and just get a faster one in my Mac Pro.
And yes, in a Mac Pro the CPU sockets are fully accessible and you can upgrade them.
(DIY'ing)
What's been overlooked by these distractions is the original point made by GoMac. That point was that there's not a significantly different time investment on a specific DIY upgrade on a Hack versus on a Mac. As such, this is element is not a meaningful differentiator.
(Time/Cost of DIY upgrades)
Not quite. The 'worth' was the contingency option if he chose to claim that his time investment wasn't zero. He instead chose zero:
"Yes I put a new 550ti in today and it 0 hrs."
Ahem:
"I do do it for fun..."
It is not like this is the first time that this topic has ever been raised. The typical points that form this debate are old, tired, and quite predictable.
No, they prove it on their own, every time this debate comes up.
As I said, the typical points that form this debate are old, tired, and quite predictable.
-hh
you are correct, but the upgrading is limited. And pulling an ATX MOBO is not the same as pulling a MP logic board.
How is the upgrading limited? You can use any socket and chipset compatible Xeon, same as any Hackintosh.
You keep saying limited but you're not putting forward any solid examples here. The only real example so far is that you can gut the entire machine and change out the board.
Again, Hackintoshes have their strong points against iMacs. But against Mac Pros things start to get much weaker, especially against the dual processor models.
HH, that's poor excuse for making a completely unreasonable argument. Also, the point was not just the time, the point was on the value of that time.
You're just clipping up posts from all over the place to obfuscate the criticisms I had of your previous posts.
Lets get back on point, talk plaining and coherently, and we can continue. However, if this is your chosen method of discourse, sound byte by sound byte, I have no interest in talking to you further.