It isn't 2016 anymore - Who cares what Intel is offering? They are now in the boat AMD used to be in.
If your workflows need cores & ram, staying with Intel is foolish.
PCIe 4.0 may be shortlived, but PCIe 3.0 is getting EoLed now.
Since Tim Cook took over, Apple's target audience for the Mac Pro has shrunk.
Your constant drumbeat that Intel does not matter and that AMD is now THE WAY borders on the same mindless zealotry people have for NVIDIA GPUs. Technology is always see-sawing back and forth. This is not the first time that AMD has had the drop on Intel and how long the party lasts no one really knows. AMD is making great strides, but there are still places where things need to be shorn up, markets entered, products delivered, promises kept and strategies articulated. I think AMD is in the best place managerially that they have been in a long time, possibly the best ever, but they are still not 100% firing on all cylinders...they are still vulnerable, they are not THE BOMB.
Some places mandate Intel for a variety of reasons and so that won't necessarily change, guaranteeing sales, no matter how undeserved. Intel has dug themselves a deep hole they are still not doing a good job of digging themselves out of at this time and AMD is benefitting from that. Intel's product range and depth is still more diverse than AMD's. People still trust Intel more than AMD and have more awareness of Intel than AMD.
PCIe 3.0 still has plenty of life left in it, just like PCIe 2.0 did/does on those old Mac Pro 4,1-5,1. PCIe 3.0 is tried and true tested technology at this point. PCIe 4.0 is just now beginning to hit the market and there is zero significant penetration of PCIe 4.0 anything in the marketplace right now. Bus transitions are never a snap of the fingers. Even AMD is coming out with new PCHs and motherboards that are going to be based on PCIe 3.0. If the transition to 5.0 leaves 4.0 with a short life, then expect the transition to 5.0 to be long and arduous, unnecessarily so. PC OEMs hate these sort of things and just because the new hotness showed up doesn't mean that everyone is going to chase the new hotness. AMD can try to drive the uptake of PCIe 4.0, but until Intel adopts it or PCIe 5.0, OEMs and parts makers will be slow to dive in...
The target audience for the 2019 Mac Pro is not the same as the 2006-2012 Mac Pro and is narrower and smaller...I'm not sure anyone disagrees with that assessment. But it doesn't mean there is no target market or that there are no customers who are eagerly awaiting the new Mac Pro.
You're just not eagerly awaiting it....that's fine, but it doesn't make your opinions truth. The market will decide whether Apple's Mac Pro is worth investing in or not.
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The problem Apple faces is that professional-grade PCs, workstations and servers are almost infinitely configurable from a vast range of motherboards, CPUs, GPUs, cases etc. and if you can't build one your self there are plenty of specialist companies that will build and support something to your particular needs. The $3000 entry-level graphic designer's workstation doesn't have to share a chassis, motherboard or even CPU family with the $15,000 racks in the render farm. With the MP, Apple produced a one-size-fits-nobody chassis and motherboard which is over-specified and over-priced as a entry-level system but won't compete with custom PC builds at the high-end.
What Apple really needs to do now, I think, is find a way of licensing MacOS on generic PC hardware - rather than trying to force people who need a pick-up-truck to buy a gull-winged luxury SUV. OK, that went badly last time, but the market has changed beyond recognition since - Then, pro media workstations were Apple's bread and butter. Now, Apple has a huge 'consumer' customer base who want laptops, minis and all-in-ones. Then, PCs were still running a warmed-over version of DOS that barely supported 32-bit processors and Apple had a superior RISC-based architecture. Now, hate all you want, but Windows 10 is actually a pretty solid, modern OS at its core, and at the end of the day Macs are technically little more than PCs in nice boxes with a different OS - and while you can sell laptops and iMacs on nice design, as you move upscale and function becomes more important that form, it becomes more and more obvious that hardware assembled from off-the-peg components cost less for the same technology than Apple's bling-y 'bespoke' machines.
Or, just make a decently-powered Xeon/i9/AMD tower (which, in 2019, isn't going to appeal to iMac customers, but will be much easier to design) from generic components in a nicer-than-average case and charge a reasonable premium for the ability to run MacOS.
Your statement above is
EXACTLY why Apple just built and announced "a one-size-fits-nobody chassis and motherboard which is over-specified and over-priced as a entry-level system but won't compete with custom PC builds at the high-end." and priced it at $6,000.00.
If Windows 10 is "actually a pretty solid, modern OS at its core, and at the end of the day Macs are technically little more than PCs in nice boxes with a different OS" then why are you here arguing for Apple to license macOS on generic PC hardware? Just go build yourself a Windows 10 workstation and laugh at all of us proles who keep giving Apple our money.
You're trying to get Apple to do what Microsoft did with Windows, which is simply make it a commodity like a hard drive or a stick of DRAM. Microsoft gained incredible marketshare and profit, but at the cost of ever being able to actually control their own operating system. Instead that incredible marketshare and enterprise sales cripples Microsoft as they try to advance Windows all the while trying to please everyone all at the same time. And "everyone" has made Windows a joyless, soulless shell to have to deal with, work on and look forward to since it first gained those large, tangible bits of marketshare.
A "
reasonable premium" is what? What you think it is in your mind. What
@ssgbryan thinks it is. Whatever
@Peperino thinks it is? The same pittance Dell, HP, Lenovo and Acer accept from users while they fight each other tooth and nail for business while trying to make a decent profit in a shrinking market whose largest driver is who can assemble the least worst POS and still call it a computer?
The modern PC market is like a shark tank filled with chum, and you want Apple to step into that willingly. And you think that is a wise business decision?
Again, if macOS is nothing special, why do you care how much Apple sells the Mac Pro for and whether they even sell one at all? You sound perfectly content to build or have built a Windows PC from generic components. That will never be Apple, that can
NEVER be Apple or that means they have lost their way and that's what will take them down before the lost sales from pricing the Mac Pro at $6,000.00 ever will.
Why would you even want Apple to do this? I truly think you don't understand Apple at all...all that you said above is
anathema.