I half expected the LG Displays going off the Apple Store was a positive sign, only days weeks later to see a new LG model show up :/ I would expect Apple to stop suppling LG if their displays were near ready![]()
The fact that there is no leak, shows that this thing is still far from ready.
Or that it’s being made in the US.
Reminds me: a couple years ago you could really see MBP's everywhere - in public and also in my line of work (which is mostly Windows-based) - people were buying them to run Windows as the main OS.
Is this still a thing in general or has everyone moved on? Without the glowing logo on the lid it has become harder to spot them but it kinda feels like their numbers are dwindling in favour of Lenovo's slim models wherever I look.
The tube Mac Pro was demoed on stage after the keynote. There was a ~1-hour session were a 3D modeler was using it. I can't find the video, but it was called "sculpting the universe" or something similar.
A lot of what if, I thinks, maybe's, etc etc etc. Just like before will show it if/when they are ready.
with no new mac pro it may be time to Dracarys apple
https://www.asus.com/Mini-PCs/Mini-PC-ProArt-PA90/
Asus’s mini tower is liquid cool. And its storage and memory are user upgradable. A very viable competitor of 2019 Mac Pro. Is there any engineering issue that stops Apple from adopting liquid cooling?
I once attended WWDC with a jack ass and a honeycomb... and all Phil could say was “can’t innovate anymore my ass”with no new mac pro it may be time to Dracarys apple
How does TB3 on an ASUS MB mean Apple need not be dependent on Intel for TB ?X570 motherboard specs starting to show up around the internet, a few ASRock boards with "Thunderbolt 3 Ready" tags, ASRock does make a TB3 AIC...
So a sign that Apple need not be totally dependent on Intel in regards to TB3...?
Also, look at this sexy Mini-DTX board...!
![]()
WWDC19 invites all except the one with the Android ajem Robot, shown a cylinder at 2-3 o'clock... Maybe apple decided to recycle the trashcan with AMD ryzen 3000 and Navi GPUs and expected updates as Tb3 PCIE4 SSD ...
[doublepost=1558977459][/doublepost]ASRock sells an TB3 AIC (Add In Card) compatible with some of theirs motherboards, it's based in Alpine Ridge TB3 Header Controller, you have to plug your videcard dp output to this card and this card to youl motherboard USB-3.2 r2 muxer Header, so the USB-C ports in the motherboard are converted to usb4 or full blown thunderbolt 3 port's (in addition to the aic own ports)
....
The announcement of the MBP sounds like deck clearing. .... .
This thread was started almost exactly 3 years ago. It's been a long wait for 7,1.
Apple's apparent disinterest in its flagship Mac has been frankly astonishing to me.
The Mac Pro was not Apple's flagship product 3 years ago. It stopped being the flagship about 2008-2009. What is surprising is that 10 years on folks are still trying to tag it as such.
And that takes a year plus to come up with?
not Craig Frederighi said:we completely rethink the Mac Pro, an we concluded: the Mac Pro 2013 is the best Mac Pro ever the developers need, so we decided to make it better with new components updated as newer CPU and GPU but don't care the thermal core still in with it's impressive 450W TDP...
The liquid cooled PowerMac G5.
How does TB3 on an ASUS MB mean Apple need not be dependent on Intel for TB ?
The x570 chipset is associated with AMD cpus. I'm going to assume that within the context of Boil's post, it suggests we have AM4 motherboards with 'semi official' or 'more official than before' TB support.
X570 motherboard specs starting to show up around the internet, a few ASRock boards with "Thunderbolt 3 Ready" tags, ASRock does make a TB3 AIC...
So a sign that Apple need not be totally dependent on Intel in regards to TB3...?
Also, look at this sexy Mini-DTX board...!
![]()
How does TB3 on an ASUS MB mean Apple need not be dependent on Intel for TB ?
All it means is ASUS has licensed TB. Something they have done for a few years.
My ASUS gaming PC I built has TB3 on it and its almost two years old.
ASRock sells an TB3 AIC (Add In Card) compatible with some of theirs motherboards, it's based in Alpine Ridge TB3 Header Controller, you have to plug your videcard dp output to this card and this card to youl motherboard USB-3.2 r2 muxer Header, so the USB-C ports in the motherboard are converted to usb4 or full blown thunderbolt 3 port's (in addition to the aic own ports)
And that takes a year plus to come up with?
After 501 pages of conjecture, it seems that some people never read or completely forgot what Phil said during the infamous Mea Culpa.
I'll cherry pick a few points to get people back on track:
"As part of doing a new Mac Pro — it is, by definition, a modular system — we will be doing a pro display as well."
(Mac Pros have always been modular since forever— so the Lego theory is just pie in the sky. What isn't modular? iMac & laptops)
"So we see a really interesting complementary role for our silicon working with Intel. And we certainly work with Intel on our needs to deliver chips into our Mac roadmap and we see that continuing."
(So sorry all you AMD & ARM daydreamers, the next MacPro CPU is gunna be Intel's and by default that means Xeons).
I'll leave that there. There are more hints as to what it may be like (capable of accepting a single powerful GPU and capable of being upgraded BY APPLE in the future- if anyone cares to read the transcript carefully.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/04/06/t...-john-ternus-on-the-state-of-apples-pro-macs/
To be fair those didn't have many problems after the early models.
I think they meant "modular" as in a separate display from the computer.Modular is simple, it means you can add and remove components most likely being: memory, video card, possibly storage.
If that’s what Apple means by modular, they’d already be bragging about their current “budget” modular system - the Mac mini.I think they meant "modular" as in a separate display from the computer.
Which is why they said it has "always been a modular system"... meaning its display was separate. Which is the opposite of the iMac Pro.
We will have to wait and see what Apple actually reveals, but when they say "modular", I believe they were talking about separate display from computer, not replaceable internal components.