Dying to get my hands on the 27" Thunderbolt display!
Can't find the link at the moment, but I did read on the Intel site that it won't be possible to make a drop-in TB card.
The logic board needs to be "enabled" somehow.
That said, a friend of mine with a new pre-TB Mac Pro is in touch with an outfit in Los Angeles that use a lot of Mac Pros, and they say that they will taking delivery of drop-in TB cards (into the PCI slots) in the near future.
Of the different approaches, this makes the most sense IMO, as it's simple and cost effective.Similarly, another workaround could use a short internal DP cable to run the data down to the motherboard and the TB controller chip. You'd need a new motherboard with a DP input cable socket.
Hopefully, a standard for such an implementation will be agreed upon, solving this issue for users on any platform and keep costs at a minimum (i.e specifications for an edge connector).Apple has enough money to fund a non-reference design if they wish. Not going to make the video card options on the Mac Pro get less expensive though. Back to non-mainstream video cards.
Definitely. Both Data + Video and Data only implementations would have a negative impact on adoption due to the resulting confusion, so Intel is trying to prevent this.What Intel is trying to avoid are "PCI-e data out only" ports on computers. Obviously on some peripherals (e.g., a FW-to-TB dongle with one port) that will be the case so it is possible to do. However, it is going to cause some user confusion if sometimes the TB port on a computer can pump out display video and sometimes it can't. The directions can't be "plug your display into the socket with the lightning bolt".
Maybe, but it's not idiot-proof in terms of users spending sufficient time to understand the differences IMO and still end up in a mess.What they kind of need is a variant of Thunderbolt. TB-D which only does data which is an optional standard with a different symbol so user expectations aren't the same.
I just don't see this ending well, even if they create a different TB connector for the computer side on a Data only implementation (i.e. add a Key to the existing port). The peripheral end can't change, so it could still be connected to a TB monitor which won't work.
My comments were based on mass consumption, not specialty products. So Idiot Proofing the port as best as possible is in Intel's best interest for fast adoption rates (hence the comments they've made so far).USB and eSATA have survived USB+eSATA combo sockets pretty well so it could go OK. There are couple of key factors. One, the standard socket has to be the dominantly deployed one. Second, they keep these non-standard sockets away from the populations that have higher requirements for "idiot proof" connectors.
I don't disagree here.For the first, if they can get a large number of laptops and all-in-one design to adopt it then that will solve the dominate usage factor.
This was the main point of my post.If someone tries to come out with a "Bubba Joe's TB data only" card for generic PCs, then I think Intel will make their life pretty miserable if they can.
I would expect they are (I'd be shocked if Intel made this big a blunder, given how they're marketing it currently).Not sure if the active transmitters inside the TB cables are tuned so that they do DisplayPort also so TB may have another , bigger "idiot proof" problem.
You do know you can use the display through the mini-display port on your video card right? So storage can be with a eSATA 6Gb PCI card and mini-display to TB 27" display. Storage and video solved without thunderbolt. Imagine that.
+1
I still don't pretend to understand why so many people are hung up on having the current implementation of TB on a desktop workstation.
+1
...Right now, I think TB has a lot more practicality with mobile and all-in-one computing, where adding drive controller and/or RAID cards are not options.
Has anyone heard any news on this? When they're coming out, how much they will cost, etc?
Road warriors who use their laptop as their desktop too can have a one cord connection to an external monitor, wired network, back-up disc... Thunderbolt becomes the elegant docking station.
Physically impossible. Will never happen.
Thunderbolt communicates directly with the CPU and on-CPU GPU. The lack of on-die GPU is also why the current MacPro has not been updated with TB.
TB is fantastic for laptops and closed desktops like the mini/iMac because it allows for port expansion. Real desktops like Mac Pro don't need it, it has PCIe slots that can accommodate cards for everything TB is capable of.
Physically impossible. Will never happen.
Thunderbolt communicates directly with the CPU and on-CPU GPU.
The lack of on-die GPU is also why the current MacPro has not been updated with TB.
Real desktops like Mac Pro don't need it, it has PCIe slots that can accommodate cards for everything TB is capable of.
That is false information.Physically possible. Will never happen because Intel and Apple don't care.
False.Thunderbolt is nothing more then a bridge for PCI-e signals and a clever multiplexer to allow DisplayPort through the same cable as well.
False.Board makers could build a card that takes all three inputs. In fact ASUS already has.
False. It does, thats the primary fact preventing the MacPro from getting TB.It doesn't have to be on-die GPU.
False."Real" is debatable
It SHOULD be possible to make a Thunderbolt card. The issue is that it has to be part of a GPU card.
False.
The issue is that it needs direct communication with the CPU.
The issue is that it needs direct communication with the CPU.
Intel introduced Light Peak at the 2009 Intel Developer Forum (IDF), using a prototype Mac Pro motherboard to run two 1080p video streams plus LAN and storage devices over a single 30-meter optical cable with modified USB ends.[9] The system was driven by a prototype PCI Express card, with two optical buses powering four ports.[10]
and we still don't have any idea if/when we willl ever see this?
A multiplexer is not a CPU.Thunderbolt has it's own CPU.
You answered yourself.Where is the direct link to the CPU, apart from the GPU DisplayPort data?
That is false information.Once again, Thunderbolt is PCI-e.
Please quote a source, wikipedia is not accurate for any form of information.Don't believe me? Fine, here's this, straight from Wikipedia:
Thanks for providing proof there will never be a TB PCIe card.The prototype Mac Pro motherboard in question was modified
You already have.please provide a citation as to why TB absolutely unequivocally requires CPU-specific features if you drop the DisplayPort compatibility.
A multiplexer is not a CPU.
You already have.
TB will never drop video output.