Yes. Glacier Falls will ship first as X-9000 series Core i9 models and then eventually be re-branded as W-2000 series Xeons later on that will be used to update the iMac Pro.
Hence, do you think we will see a new imac before the iMP?
Yes. Glacier Falls will ship first as X-9000 series Core i9 models and then eventually be re-branded as W-2000 series Xeons later on that will be used to update the iMac Pro.
Well my boot camp driver for my 2017 iMac 580. I am able to get very good performance so I’m shocked that the Vega 64 is horrible.
Hence, do you think we will see a new imac before the iMP?
The Vega 64 is designated a workstation card as opposed to a consumer card like the 580 so that could play a role - the drivers for the Vega are probably tuned even more for stability and not gaming performance (similar to nVidia Quadro drivers compared to their GeForce drivers).
I believe that we will see an updated iMac Pro before we seen an updated iMac. Ice Lake will be Mobile-only to start so there will not be an Ice Lake desktop chip usable in the iMac until probably late 2020 or early 2021. Intel should have the W-2000 series Cascade Lake Xeons out before then.
So it’s still only getting around 5 FPS on basic games like some reports suggest?
If the iMac Pro doesn't support DisplayPort 1.4, then how does Apple's new USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter support 3840x2160 at 60Hz? The adapter only has two DisplayPort lanes which allow up to HBR3 speed.Plus the 2019 iMac is known to support 4k HDR movies in the upcoming Catalina, while it seems that iMac Pro is not, because it doesn't support DisplayPort 1.4. I don't know if that's important to you, but it was important to me.
/System/Library/Extensions/AppleGraphicsControl.kext/Contents/MacOS/AGDCDiagnose -a > AGDCDiagnose_a.txt 2>&1
That nonsense again? It works over Windows on the 2017 iMac and iMP.Plus the 2019 iMac is known to support 4k HDR movies in the upcoming Catalina, while it seems that iMac Pro is not, because it doesn't support DisplayPort 1.4. I don't know if that's important to you, but it was important to me.
From what I've read, the 2018 MacBook Pro was the first to support DP 1.4. In fact, I've seen nothing that stated the 2019 iMac supports it either.If the iMac Pro doesn't support DisplayPort 1.4...
Are they updated Xeon’s for it?My guess only, but there probably won't be a 2019 iMac Pro model (since all the energy and hoopla for this year went into the Mac Pro).
Perhaps in 2020...?
So I think I decided on the one I want.
8-Core
64GB of RAM
Vega 64
1TB SSD.
$5,592 with my discount.
I was thinking about upping the 1TB for 2TB, so that might still change. But I find external SSDs just fine for my needs. My only concern was to limit macOS and Windows to 512GB each. Will this last for 5+ years or should I get the 2TB for 1TB each?
Cascade Lake X will be presented next month.
There is a chance that the next iMP will feature a 10c at the base configuration since the iMac will feature chips up to 10 cores.
Right now the iMac high end features 8cores, as much as the iMP starts with.
That nonsense again? It works over Windows on the 2017 iMac and iMP.
Apple only said that all Macs released in 2018 would support it. They didn't say that nothing released earlier wouldn't have that support. It's not the same thing.
We'll all know in September.
I did some DisplayPort to HDMI/DVI adapter testing at https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...ransfers-recommendation.2278473/post-29466205If the iMac Pro doesn't support DisplayPort 1.4, then how does Apple's new USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter support 3840x2160 at 60Hz? The adapter only has two DisplayPort lanes which allow up to HBR3 speed.
For 4K60Hz:
1) two lanes of HBR3 is enough to support 8bpc RGB but only using DisplayPort timing 533MHz. HDMI 2.0 timing of 594MHz supports 10bpc YCbCr422.
2) two lanes of HBR2 can only support 6bpc YCbCr422 or 8bpc YCbCr420 (I don't think 420 is a valid option for macOS graphics drivers).
Since iMac Pro has Alpine Ridge Thunderbolt 3 controllers (is that still true?), then it can't output DisplayPort 1.4 over Thunderbolt 3, but maybe the iMac Pro bypasses the Thunderbolt 3 controller when connected to a USB-C DisplayPort alt mode device?
One way to find out is to connect a DisplayPort 1.4 device such as the Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter and check the output of the following command:
Code:/System/Library/Extensions/AppleGraphicsControl.kext/Contents/MacOS/AGDCDiagnose -a > AGDCDiagnose_a.txt 2>&1