It's now been done:
http://blog.macsales.com/22188-owc-confirms-mac-pro-2013-processor-upgradeable
Lou
http://blog.macsales.com/22188-owc-confirms-mac-pro-2013-processor-upgradeable
Lou
It's now been done:
Nice find Lou. That's the exact processor I'd consider putting in, too. The challenge is: that one is a bit tricky to find in the retail channels. Instead, Intel seems to want to sell consumers the 3.4GHz 150W 8-core.
As far as I recall:
There's a going to be a physical change in the socket of Haswell Xeons: The new socket (LGA 2011-3) looks the same, but are wired differently, so you will be denied the option of upgrading to a better CPU introduced i.e. next year or two years from now.
You will probably be able to upgrade to other LGA 2011 socket CPUs (i.e. the other ones in the current nMP line-up) though, but you'll be stuck in Ivy Bridge Country, when tech moves to Haswell and later on Broadwell.
It is quite strange, that the nMP is introduced with an "old architecture", though Apple had no choice at this point in time. But they could have updated the oMP to Sandy Bridge/Ivy Bridge architecture and let the old chassis survive another generation - then made an 2-month exclusive deal with Intel on the Haswell Xeons for the nMP. That would have sent shockwaves through the industry.
Introducing the nMP with Ivy Bridge is, just as everything with the nMP, a strange and totally unnecessary compromise.
Personally, for the same price, the 2690v2 looks better to me, but I guess it depends on how much you want the 4GHz turbo vs. the extra 2 cores.
Intel anticipate production starting towards the end of 2014, but yields is another issue altogether. It will be mid 2015 before they can make enough to satisfy Apples demands, never mind ironing the bugs out of a seriously large change in architecture with the chipset. Then finally supply of the other stuff such as ECC DDR4 coming down from insane prices.