I hope the new FCP heavily utilizes GCD to the point where a 16 core Mac Pro would be awesome.
I wonder if the MP is going LGA 2011 or LGA 1356 this year
Let us see the goods: quad-channel RAM and 320Gb/s via 40xPCI-E 3.0 lanes, Hello horde of TB portsLGA 2011 seems almost certain. From everything I have read LGA 2011 is the successor to LGA 1366 in the traditional sense of how Intel move forward, with the main difference being multi-processor capable CPUs will be using the same socket rather than their own special one.
But those wires all over the place? What about needing to 'eject' a device in the middle of the daisy chain? What a mess. Not very 'Apple-like.'
How is this not very Apple like when Firewire (and SCSI before it) both work in the same way?![]()
Yes, they can work like Thunderbolt. The point is that Apple is heading towards computers with less options.
One of those options is expandability. We can add cards to avoid the external wiring mess at this time. But one wonders if that choice will go away now that in Thunderbolt Apple can offer external solutions with internal speeds.
MAC PRO users will change. The person that needed an iMac with two external drives at full speed will buy the iMac buy the Lacie raid0 t-bolt and buy the promise 6 drive raid6 he will daisy chain them and the internal will back up the lacie raid0 t-bolt for boot. Assuming iMacs allow this with t-bolt. This person had to buy a mac pro because he could not afford down time of an iMac with a dead internal drive. He did not want the slower fw800 as a backup. This is going to cut into mac pro sales. This same person was fine with 16gb ram offered in an iMac. He was fine with a glossy screen.
After observing him for 25 years, I know how Steve Jobs' mind works.
2011 Sandy Bridge = more than enough power for any user Apple cares about. [notice I didn't say enough power for every user that would like to use a Mac] Six cores in every remaining product will be enough for everyone by decree. OpenCL will take up some slack here at well.
2011 Light Peak = the permanent end of slots. Remember how Steve fought against "slots" for the Apple II? Remember how the original Macs had none? Remember how he loved the Cube? How he loves the Air? Fundamentally, Steve is a minimalist, and truly hates anything extraneous. And by extraneous, I mean to him, not to you.
I do believe that all Macs will only ship with audio ports, and Light Peaks ports. No FireWire, no USB, no ethernet, no display outputs.
But what about all my legacy stuff?? Too bad. That is why there is eBay. Apple has never hesitated to drop old formats and connectors, and has never been shy in doing this.
Servers:
With the intro of the Mac Mini Server, the Xserve is for sure dead, maybe this year, or for sure the next. Apple cares nothing for the HPC space (no Infiniband drivers even). And Macs will never be used in the data center in any meaningful way for a huge number of reasons. I have no doubt that linux will be running on cheap white boxes at Apple's new place in NC. I'm really surprised that Xgird, Xsan, and so on are even still offered. Anybody hoping for mac "enterprise" products of any kind from Steve, or from any of his friends (Ellison, etc.) are SOL. Apple is all about the SoHo space.
Pro Audio:
No doubt some Pro Tools guys are in denial, but Steve has declared total war on Avid/Digidesign with their Apogee/Euphonix/Logic alliance. And by the ridiculously cheap pricing of FCP. Further, it would take nothing for Apogee to design Light Peak X-Symphony cards, and the dsp guys (UA, TC, etc.) will have to rewrite native versions of their plugs.
Pro Photo/Video:
Flash storage readers (whatever flavor)-->Light Peak-->Mac. Mac-->Light Peak-->DreamColor-esque display. Storage pooling over 10 gigabit ethernet protocol over Light Peak to a 3rd party array. Basically a variation of what Small Tree is advocating right now. Render to a 3rd party farm via Light Peak.
Anybody Else:
Apple truly does not care about your pro needs. This is the company that bought Shake and then killed it. In fact, he doesn't really care about pro users at all and never will. Steve is about bringing art to the masses, rather than bringing the machines that make art to the artists. And most importantly, he will never build the gaming rig of your dreams. Or care about cutting edge graphics of any kind.
So, if the above is a problem for you, I recommend you enjoy whatever speedbumps 2010 brings for the Mac Pro and xServe!
How do you see this changing after Jobs is gone?
Errrrr... for a single drive FW800 is not slower. FW400 would even be fast enough.
.............
many of us do not need a mac pro ? we need things it offers though expansion and fast storage are the two main things with TB should be able to deliver
if I could get a 6 core i7 style chip and have TB for my storage
that might do me fine as long as I could get 24 gigs of ram in it
chances are that would do %75 or more of the Mac Pro users out today ? the other ones most likely need more muscle and more cores for video production etc..
I actually also agree that we'd have a better chance of seeing features like Crossfire/SLI after Jobs is gone.
However, I still don't think Jobs would cut the Mac Pro line. We'd just see more niche features that he doesn't necessarily care about.
Agreed. I wish Steve would leave the responsibility for the the Mac Pro line to desktop enthusiasts in Apple. I assume there are a few of those left![]()
Steve is king of the iTards and obviously hates Macs because the iToy man obviously couldn't like real computersWhy does everyone assume Steve is the one holding things back?
Now that MS finally seems to have their act together and people are leaving that doggy Windows XP technology behind, EFI use should increase. As others love to point out, Apple relies on commodity parts these days just like everyone else. The problem is the majority of those commodity parts are still on the last generation of technology since everything in the Windows world revolves around rock bottom pricing and not new technology (new tech is expensive!).
As more PC's ditch BIOS and ship with OS's that can talk EFI, graphics card manufacturers will follow suit.
And after that happens if there are still only a handful of cards to pick from, then I will happily break out my pitchfork and torch and join in.