I'm not thrilled about the design. However, everything else has me squealing in girlish delight.
1 - I love the expandability. EIGHT PCIe slots? Four of which are double-wide? Hells yes. Apple is clearly opening the door for users to truly customize their 7,1s in whatever way they see fit. And that's a good thing.
2 - Price. No, seriously - consider the base model for the 7,1 and the iMac Pro. The difference between the two at the lowest level is surprisingly small. I was honestly terrified that with the iMac Pro starting at $5k, the 7,1 would start at something like $8-9k. $6k is...surprisingly competitive. And yeah, I know that'll scale up quickly, but it's still more reasonably priced than I imagined.
3 - NOTHING IS ****ING SOLDERED IN PLACE! Oh, sweet merciful Buddha, after the Mac Mini/Macbook/iMac nonsense of the past five years, I was honestly dreading this. But every major component that SHOULD be swappable...IS. Thank you, Robot Zombie Ninja Pirate Jesus, THANK you! I don't have to worry about what I might need in the future with regards to CPU performance, or RAM, or hard drive space.
4 - RAM. Holy skagsuck, an upper limit of 1.5TB? With 12 slots of DDR4? Please excuse me whilst I change my pants, as I just happy'd myself at the thought.
5 - MPX. I know that Apple is gonna charge a premium for their MPX stuff, but I honestly hope to god that this becomes a universal form factor. The MPX allows up to 500W being delivered to a single card, completely obsolescing internal power cables for high-end devices like GPUs. This is a GOOD IDEA, and one I'd love to see the industry adopt.
6 - 1.4kW PSU. Duuuuuuude.
Pretty much the only thing that concerns me is hard drives. They say 'all-flash' and it looks to me like a custom connection. Oh, I know that third parties will come along and make their own hard drives, but I'm not super thrilled about the idea of being locked into Apple's designs, particularly when I have about 10TB of data stored on HDDs. I see what look like two SATA connectors on the board, so maybe I'm being paranoid, but the silence on that subject is not my favorite thing ever.
1 - I love the expandability. EIGHT PCIe slots? Four of which are double-wide? Hells yes. Apple is clearly opening the door for users to truly customize their 7,1s in whatever way they see fit. And that's a good thing.
2 - Price. No, seriously - consider the base model for the 7,1 and the iMac Pro. The difference between the two at the lowest level is surprisingly small. I was honestly terrified that with the iMac Pro starting at $5k, the 7,1 would start at something like $8-9k. $6k is...surprisingly competitive. And yeah, I know that'll scale up quickly, but it's still more reasonably priced than I imagined.
3 - NOTHING IS ****ING SOLDERED IN PLACE! Oh, sweet merciful Buddha, after the Mac Mini/Macbook/iMac nonsense of the past five years, I was honestly dreading this. But every major component that SHOULD be swappable...IS. Thank you, Robot Zombie Ninja Pirate Jesus, THANK you! I don't have to worry about what I might need in the future with regards to CPU performance, or RAM, or hard drive space.
4 - RAM. Holy skagsuck, an upper limit of 1.5TB? With 12 slots of DDR4? Please excuse me whilst I change my pants, as I just happy'd myself at the thought.
5 - MPX. I know that Apple is gonna charge a premium for their MPX stuff, but I honestly hope to god that this becomes a universal form factor. The MPX allows up to 500W being delivered to a single card, completely obsolescing internal power cables for high-end devices like GPUs. This is a GOOD IDEA, and one I'd love to see the industry adopt.
6 - 1.4kW PSU. Duuuuuuude.
Pretty much the only thing that concerns me is hard drives. They say 'all-flash' and it looks to me like a custom connection. Oh, I know that third parties will come along and make their own hard drives, but I'm not super thrilled about the idea of being locked into Apple's designs, particularly when I have about 10TB of data stored on HDDs. I see what look like two SATA connectors on the board, so maybe I'm being paranoid, but the silence on that subject is not my favorite thing ever.