Einz macrumors 6502 Original poster Feb 14, 2008 402 87 Dec 22, 2013 #1 http://www.apple.com/support/macpro/ I wonder who will sell the third party flash?
Bones13 macrumors regular Oct 7, 2008 144 62 Dec 22, 2013 #2 Am I the only Mac nerd that wanted there to be an SSD slot at the bottom of BOTH GPU cards?
td2243 Cancelled Mar 14, 2013 382 247 Santa Fe, NM Dec 22, 2013 #3 So this means that you can buy with the lowest 256GB flash and upgrade later with a 1 TB on our own, correct?
So this means that you can buy with the lowest 256GB flash and upgrade later with a 1 TB on our own, correct?
E ElectronGuru macrumors 68000 Sep 5, 2013 1,656 490 Oregon, USA Dec 22, 2013 #4 Cool read! Bones13 said: Am I the only Mac nerd that wanted there to be an SSD slot at the bottom of BOTH GPU cards? Click to expand... Shame too. It would double options and make the GPU easier to make (only one version). Trying to imagine the downside... td2243 said: So this means that you can buy with the lowest 256GB flash and upgrade later with a 1 TB on our own, correct? Click to expand... That was my takeaway, or 2GB/3GB even further, looked easier than a ram swap (fewer pins).
Cool read! Bones13 said: Am I the only Mac nerd that wanted there to be an SSD slot at the bottom of BOTH GPU cards? Click to expand... Shame too. It would double options and make the GPU easier to make (only one version). Trying to imagine the downside... td2243 said: So this means that you can buy with the lowest 256GB flash and upgrade later with a 1 TB on our own, correct? Click to expand... That was my takeaway, or 2GB/3GB even further, looked easier than a ram swap (fewer pins).
theSeb macrumors 604 Aug 10, 2010 7,466 1,893 none Dec 23, 2013 #5 Thanks for this. Some good news - 4k at 60 Hz is supported via display port. "Note that these displays default to 30 Hz (instead of 60 Hz) and need to be manually configured to 60 Hz using the display's built-in controls."
Thanks for this. Some good news - 4k at 60 Hz is supported via display port. "Note that these displays default to 30 Hz (instead of 60 Hz) and need to be manually configured to 60 Hz using the display's built-in controls."