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jack_fungi

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Sep 7, 2016
10
1
Apple showcased (in today's keynote) several instances of Mac minis being stacked for improved performance and intense workloads. What if this is the "modular Mac Pro" Apple promised 1.5 years ago?

Maybe there's some neat software coming that enables Mac minis to be daisy chained together with automatic load balancing across each machine?

For expanded storage: RAID array
For better GPU: eGPU
More CPU/RAM: connect another Mac mini

Or maybe the new Mac Pro will enable pros to daisy chain Mac minis to it for expanded performance.
 

filterdecay

macrumors regular
Jul 7, 2017
171
145
Apple showcased (in today's keynote) several instances of Mac minis being stacked for improved performance and intense workloads. What if this is the "modular Mac Pro" Apple promised 1.5 years ago?

Maybe there's some neat software coming that enables Mac minis to be daisy chained together with automatic load balancing across each machine?

For expanded storage: RAID array
For better GPU: eGPU
More CPU/RAM: connect another Mac mini

Or maybe the new Mac Pro will enable pros to daisy chain Mac minis to it for expanded performance.

I doubt we will be able to chain them but this machine is probably what we get. Maxed ram and cpu with base ssd and you get a $2700 mac mini. Thats not too bad but you need to add thunderbolt chassis for it and pci-e cards. Ill be keeping an eye on this.
 

Elwe

macrumors regular
Dec 30, 2006
163
89
It's not. You bet your butt the new Mac Pro will be announced at WWDC 2019.

Correct that it is not (assuming you did not mean something more expansive). Apple has now publicly said more than once that the new Mac Pro will not be coming until next year.

But if you are making the wider point . . . that it will be expandable via chaining someone . . . no one knows, and no leaks have occurred that make imminent sense. They said it will be expandable, and they admitted they backed themselves into a thermal corner before so they will likely not do that again . . . what I do know is that TB3 probably does not have enough bandwidth nor low enough latency to really be a scalable solution going forward. Right now . . . yes, sort of. For some users. But I would either look to TB4/some kind of PCIe 4.x interconnect if they are going that way. I am cool with PC towers, too, but it does not seem like Apple is anymore. Maybe it is something combined with some kind of seamless cloud service that handles a lot of the compute . . . I just cannot see something working long term with current tech.
 

namethisfile

macrumors 65816
Jan 17, 2008
1,190
176
What is the deal with the photos of the stacked Mac Mini's? Can you buy 3 mini's and leverage the iGPU and CPU in real time when editing in FCP X or something? Or, is that just a render farm of sorts to help in encoding?

What I mean by real time is while editing in FCPX, is it using multiple iGPU's in the minis to help crunch data on the app, so scrubbing and playback of high bit rate video are smooth or something?
 

finchna

macrumors regular
May 30, 2002
227
46
Apple showcased (in today's keynote) several instances of Mac minis being stacked for improved performance and intense workloads. What if this is the "modular Mac Pro" Apple promised 1.5 years ago?

Maybe there's some neat software coming that enables Mac minis to be daisy chained together with automatic load balancing across each machine?

For expanded storage: RAID array
For better GPU: eGPU
More CPU/RAM: connect another Mac mini

Or maybe the new Mac Pro will enable pros to daisy chain Mac minis to it for expanded performance.

needs 128/256 user upgradeable ram to move it towards pro.
 

namethisfile

macrumors 65816
Jan 17, 2008
1,190
176
I still don't know how stacking the new Mac Minis helps in intense workloads. Is that in real time? Are the CPU's and iGPU's being stacked here as well? Or is it just CPU? Is this the same method where the stacked Minis are just used as offload machines for rendering or encoding? Hence, not really "real time?"

If, this is real time... how is this done? And, if this is real time, then, maybe this is probably what Apple meant by the upcoming "Modular" Mac Pro? Stackable Mac Pros?
 

Game64

macrumors member
Jan 21, 2011
56
17
Las Vegas, NV
I'm convinced now more than ever the Mac Mini is not the new Mac Pro. Allow me to explain. Apple did a few major things during that keynote to show they're listening.

1. They added back removable ram. This is something they didn't have to do, but did anyways. Removable ram makes upgrades and life easier. More importantly; it reduces the price of entry for the Mac Mini - As you can buy one and swap in more memory for cheaper than Apple sells it. I'm willing to bet Apple sells their ram and SSDs as more expensive due to business consumers willing to pay for it.

2. They kept the form-factor of the Mac Mini similar, removed the hump on the bottom, and are hyping up it's professional use. For _YEARS_ people have used Mac Minis in data-centers for high-density computing. Hell, I'm a remote consultant that travels a lot - I have a mac mini in my bag as a portable server. (Yes, The TSA looks at me funny every week.) The thermals and size matter a lot in data centers.

This is why they're stacked - So the aluminum shells can bleed heat out together. The space between the mini's acts as a small pathway for air to flow to cool them. Don't be surprised if MacStadium or someone else introduces a new server rack for them that takes advantage of this and forces air between them. Being closer together means more pressure, so faster moving air can move heat quickly.

3. They positioned the Mac Mini as being prosumer. They've identified that many people don't need Xeon processors. They need solid processors, with good ram, solid storage and expansion. By adding 4 thunderbolt ports, removable ram, and enabling eGPU support. They've basically created a prosumer monster. I could go buy one right now and pair it with 2 eGPUs. Then run Windows and Linux in a VM with GPU Passthrough and game on the Mac Mini as well as do OSX work.

-or- I could chain a bunch of GPU's together over Thunderbolt and use the Mac Mini as a bitcoin miner; use it to do GPU Data analyis, Etc. With a low barrier to entry.

A top spec Mac Mini with the highest i7, 256gb storage, 10gbe, and 8gb of ram is 1399$. That is not out of range for a prosumer. Sure - When you add expansion equipment it gets more costly. But the point is; The Mac Mini has basically given us a glimpse into the future for the Mac Pro.

---

The Mac Mini isn't a replacement for the Mac Pro, because it doesn't have ECC Memory, Xeon processors, enterprise/server grade hardware, etc. More importantly; I think Apple is going to go ham with the Mac Pro. The Mac Mini can handle a large chunk of the prosumer market. The iMac Pro can handle the rest.

That leaves room in the market for Apple to announce and develop a truly one of a kind Mac Pro that is an amazing product. The problem is, it's going to cost not just one; But two kidneys and your daughters hand in marriage.
 

cinealta

macrumors 6502
Dec 9, 2012
488
6
What if this is the "modular Mac Pro" Apple promised 1.5 years ago? Maybe there's some neat software coming that enables Mac minis to be daisy chained together with automatic load balancing across each machine?

It's not. New Mac Pro will have true workstation CPUs (XEON) for mission-critical workload, error-correcting code (ECC) memory, much larger L3 cache than consumer i7 CPUs and no integrated consumer graphics.
 
Last edited:

ctyrider

macrumors 65816
Jul 15, 2012
1,044
623
There is nothing "stacked" or "daisy chained" about Mac minis shown in MacStadium photos. They are simply a bunch of individual Minis stuck into specially made datacenter racks. MacStadium will rent them out to you for a monthly fee, and they are also looking at offering cloud type service, with virtualization layer added on top.


What is the deal with the photos of the stacked Mac Mini's? Can you buy 3 mini's and leverage the iGPU and CPU in real time when editing in FCP X or something? Or, is that just a render farm of sorts to help in encoding?
 
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filterdecay

macrumors regular
Jul 7, 2017
171
145
update: I bought the z4. Apple should of done more sooner. Sorry. bitter sweet. Going from ibook g3 to water cooled g5's to the glory that was the 2.66ghz intel macpro to a 6core macpro to a 12 core macpro monster. black macbook to many macbook pros (I'll stay mac for my laptops). The pros carried apple through some dark times and then they shunted us for great money. No complaints I would do the same. The only thing is with an extra trillion dollars laying around you would think they could squeeze some off to keep innovating for us pros.

Hp is ready to eat apples lunch btw. The z workstations have bios settings to use apple shortcuts. They know us.
 

namethisfile

macrumors 65816
Jan 17, 2008
1,190
176
There is nothing "stacked" or "daisy chained" about Mac minis shown in MacStadium photos. They are simply a bunch of individual Minis stuck into specially made datacenter racks. MacStadium will rent them out to you for a monthly fee, and they are also looking at offering cloud type service, with virtualization layer added on top.

I was referring to this photo from Appleinsider showing stacked minis in a video production workflow. The question is... Are they being leveraged in real time or is that just the usual farming of cpu cores as before?

Here is the link to the photo:

28338-43876-181031-Macmini-l.jpg
 

mikehalloran

macrumors 68020
Oct 14, 2018
2,239
666
The Sillie Con Valley
... no one knows, and no leaks have occurred that make imminent sense.
Nonsense. Apple has told us more than enough to make an educated guess.

The new Pro is being developed to run new, bleeding edge AV apps for the film industry. Apple told us this when they invited the TechCrunch article. The fact that CNET and others didn't read and understand it before writing all their "Apple must..." and "Apple will fail if they don't..." garbage doesn't mean that you shouldn't.
https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/05/apples-2019-imac-pro-will-be-shaped-by-workflows/

Since competing workstations like the Maya Box Rendering Station cost $13K (8core) to $150K (52core 1T RAM 8T SSD), I and many others expect the new New Mac Pro to $tart about where the iMac Pro ends. If it's a dime under $14,999.99 for the base model, I'll be very surprised. Then there's the new monitor Apple intends to introduce simultaneously that will add to the cost.

The T2 chip allows multiple Minis to be harnessed together for real time AV rendering. There are already some YouTube videos showing this. Since the iMac Pro has the T2 also, I can see a stack of Minis next to an iMP crunching large video or animation files.

Group enough together and the Mac Pro question becomes real — at about the same expected price. Big difference: The Mini is here now.

The Lisa sold for $9,995 in 1983; the Mac+ for $2,400 in 1985 (when I bought mine), the NeXT for $6,500 in 1988 and so on. Adjust those prices for inflation if you dare.
 

filterdecay

macrumors regular
Jul 7, 2017
171
145
Nonsense. Apple has told us more than enough to make an educated guess.

The new Pro is being developed to run new, bleeding edge AV apps for the film industry. Apple told us this when they invited the TechCrunch article. The fact that CNET and others didn't read and understand it before writing all their "Apple must..." and "Apple will fail if they don't..." garbage doesn't mean that you shouldn't.
https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/05/apples-2019-imac-pro-will-be-shaped-by-workflows/

Since competing workstations like the Maya Box Rendering Station cost $13K (8core) to $150K (52core 1T RAM 8T SSD), I and many others expect the new New Mac Pro to $tart about where the iMac Pro ends. If it's a dime under $14,999.99 for the base model, I'll be very surprised. Then there's the new monitor Apple intends to introduce simultaneously that will add to the cost.

The T2 chip allows multiple Minis to be harnessed together for real time AV rendering. There are already some YouTube videos showing this. Since the iMac Pro has the T2 also, I can see a stack of Minis next to an iMP crunching large video or animation files.

Group enough together and the Mac Pro question becomes real — at about the same expected price. Big difference: The Mini is here now.

The Lisa sold for $9,995 in 1983; the Mac+ for $2,400 in 1985 (when I bought mine), the NeXT for $6,500 in 1988 and so on. Adjust those prices for inflation if you dare.

Thats insane. The hp workstations scale from $1200 to $40k. I would expect the new macpro to base at $3000 - $3500
 

mikehalloran

macrumors 68020
Oct 14, 2018
2,239
666
The Sillie Con Valley
I would expect the new macpro to base at $3000 - $3500
There is absolutely no reason to think this — especially after reading the article and seeing who the intended customer is, the intended use and reading the scant info about the apps being developed.

There is the possibility that those new apps won't run on anything less but I doubt it after seeing demonstrations of the power of 6 Minis linked together rendering the same AV file.

The one benefit I can hope for "the rest of us" is that this ultra high performance tech will trickle down to the more popular priced Macs.
 

Spock

macrumors 68040
Jan 6, 2002
3,534
7,598
Vulcan
I am afraid this new Mac Pro is going to be priced above the pro-sumer. I wish they would sell a base model with the 6 core i5, 256 GB SSD and 16 GB of ram for under $2,000
 

mikehalloran

macrumors 68020
Oct 14, 2018
2,239
666
The Sillie Con Valley
I am afraid this new Mac Pro is going to be priced above the pro-sumer. I wish they would sell a base model with the 6 core i5, 256 GB SSD and 16 GB of ram for under $2,000
No chance that Apple would ever release a Mac Pro with less horsepower than the iMac Pro.

However, the 2018 Mini meeting that spec is $1,299 + mouse + keyboard = $1,547. You can add a good (but not spectacular) monitor for $400 to keep the whole thing under $2K.
 

Nugget

Contributor
Nov 24, 2002
2,168
1,468
Tejas Hill Country
I am afraid this new Mac Pro is going to be priced above the pro-sumer. I wish they would sell a base model with the 6 core i5, 256 GB SSD and 16 GB of ram for under $2,000

They already do. It costs $1,299. You can buy it today. It’s just called a Mac Mini now.

a7a51baa90e11d6cc74fac93dc7dc8a8.jpg
 

alphaod

macrumors Core
Feb 9, 2008
22,183
1,245
NYC
The new Mac mini is as fast as the old Mac Pro, but it's far from the new Mac Pro. I would expect the new Mac Pro to be a lot of faster (and expensive).
 

Spock

macrumors 68040
Jan 6, 2002
3,534
7,598
Vulcan
They already do. It costs $1,299. You can buy it today. It’s just called a Mac Mini now.

a7a51baa90e11d6cc74fac93dc7dc8a8.jpg

Yeah, I get that but I'm talking about a modular Mac Pro that doesn't have a soldered in SSD or at least a couple drive bays to go with it and PCIe slots.
[doublepost=1541814278][/doublepost]
No chance that Apple would ever release a Mac Pro with less horsepower than the iMac Pro.

Just like they would never release an iMac with more horsepower than the Mac Pro?
 
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