I am currently running a 2023 M2 Ultra Mac Pro, PCIe slots, etc.
I previously had a specced out 2019 Mac Pro, I enjoy them.
I, like many of you, have a really strong nostalgia for the older Mac Pros.
I decided to run as my main Mac the 2013 Mac Pro. I used to have a 12 core, D700 one, but this time I'm trying out a 6 core, D500 machine with 32GB of RAM to see how it kicks. Got it for under $200, mint condition.
I have it running to an XDR display and an Apple 5K display, on "default for display". Sure, I know it can't reach the full resolution of these monitors, but it looks great and basically at the same scale as I run my M2 Ultra.
So how is it? First, it is such a beautifully designed machine aesthetically, such high build quality.
How about performance? For every day use - browsing the web, word, YouTube, it is surprisingly snappy still. It does not have the instant response that the M2 Ultra or M3 Max has, but it opens tasks quickly enough that it does not feel like an "old" machine.
Photoshop seems to work very well for my use case, which is basically just making some thumbnails and pictures like that - despite the compatibility warnings it shows, it performed well. Yes, M2 Ultra still feels faster.
My main use is Final Cut Pro and R3D RAW footage - usually 4K. Video playback is smooth, but export times are about 20 minutes for a 10 minute video vs the M2 Ultra which is usually under 3-4 minutes.
It also will occasionally start to "lock up" a bit, not exactly the spinning ball, but it slows down once in a while.
I've picked up a few Thunderbolt 2 cables and Apple adapters, and have a Sandisk Pro Blade SSD array connected to it without any issue. It runs off of its own power, so the drives get decent speeds around 1,300MB/s, which is close to what the internal Apple SSD gets too. (512GB)
I also have it running on Monterrey, the newest that it can handle.
Just wanted to share, it's kind of fun watching the limits at work and seeing how far we've come since then. In my case, the difference is not that big - at least in what you notice day-to-day. The performance potential is obviously Huge on the M2 Ultra vs the 6.1 Mac Pro, of course, when fully utilized.
I almost wanted to run even older macOS versions on it, just for fun, and do my day-to-day stuff. It's enjoyable and nostalgic for sure!
I previously had a specced out 2019 Mac Pro, I enjoy them.
I, like many of you, have a really strong nostalgia for the older Mac Pros.
I decided to run as my main Mac the 2013 Mac Pro. I used to have a 12 core, D700 one, but this time I'm trying out a 6 core, D500 machine with 32GB of RAM to see how it kicks. Got it for under $200, mint condition.
I have it running to an XDR display and an Apple 5K display, on "default for display". Sure, I know it can't reach the full resolution of these monitors, but it looks great and basically at the same scale as I run my M2 Ultra.
So how is it? First, it is such a beautifully designed machine aesthetically, such high build quality.
How about performance? For every day use - browsing the web, word, YouTube, it is surprisingly snappy still. It does not have the instant response that the M2 Ultra or M3 Max has, but it opens tasks quickly enough that it does not feel like an "old" machine.
Photoshop seems to work very well for my use case, which is basically just making some thumbnails and pictures like that - despite the compatibility warnings it shows, it performed well. Yes, M2 Ultra still feels faster.
My main use is Final Cut Pro and R3D RAW footage - usually 4K. Video playback is smooth, but export times are about 20 minutes for a 10 minute video vs the M2 Ultra which is usually under 3-4 minutes.
It also will occasionally start to "lock up" a bit, not exactly the spinning ball, but it slows down once in a while.
I've picked up a few Thunderbolt 2 cables and Apple adapters, and have a Sandisk Pro Blade SSD array connected to it without any issue. It runs off of its own power, so the drives get decent speeds around 1,300MB/s, which is close to what the internal Apple SSD gets too. (512GB)
I also have it running on Monterrey, the newest that it can handle.
Just wanted to share, it's kind of fun watching the limits at work and seeing how far we've come since then. In my case, the difference is not that big - at least in what you notice day-to-day. The performance potential is obviously Huge on the M2 Ultra vs the 6.1 Mac Pro, of course, when fully utilized.
I almost wanted to run even older macOS versions on it, just for fun, and do my day-to-day stuff. It's enjoyable and nostalgic for sure!