What the MacPro should look like - https://www.servethehome.com/superm...l-xeon-phi-x200-developer-workstation-review/
Two KNL 68-core chips.
Two KNL 68-core chips.
I'm really worried about heat issues with the iMac pro. Sure, it's got upgraded cooling, but they also thought the MP6,1 was adequately cooled and those things glitch out on long renders like nobody's business.
I wonder how they test 'under load'. It really seems like they optimize for short bursts, but I regularly run very long render queues.
xDAh come on, you'll change your mind when they make the Apple Watch Pro!
Yep, if you are waiting on Apple to give you the option to run Nvidia on the upcoming Mac Pro, I think you're gonna be disappointed. Yes, you might be able to hack it together on an external GPU but it's likely to be unsupported by Apple.Well thats an ongoing issue that the new Mac Pro wasn't going to change most likely. Apple using AMD is par for the course. If you're a pro user and you need flexibility like that you need to get off the platform.
Yep, if you are waiting on Apple to give you the option to run Nvidia on the upcoming Mac Pro, I think you're gonna be disappointed. Yes, you might be able to hack it together on an external GPU but it's likely to be unsupported by Apple.
If the iMac Pro is any indication, we're stuck with AMD and custom GPU's.
So, there's no real alternative to CUDA - but it's good that Apple is going with the low-priced brand?I don't know that they'll lock out Nvidia for eGPU, would seem to sort of directly contradict the point. But, it does seem AMD GPUs are the way forward.
And I think this is a good thing. It seems to me that AMD is always finding a way to get the most computer power/dollar into its GPUs, and at the same time OpenCL has really not taken off the way it needs to in order to really be any sort of alternative to CUDA. Apple seems to be doing all the heavy lifting on that side of things with Core ML and Metal 2...could be a deadly effective combo with AMD GPUs that are targeted towards not only single-precision compute power but double and half precision as well.
Source? My company is following the same rule that it followed in 2001 - laptops and desktops are bought with three year all-inclusive warranties, subjected to capital expenditure depreciation for three years, and replaced when they are amortized and the warranty expires (at the same time).I'd also note that replacement cycles for computer hardware have increased dramatically over the last decade
LOL nonsense.3) I expect the ASP (average selling price) of 7,1 workstations to be pushing $10,000, fully loaded pushing $15,000. If the performance is there, the market will bear it.
If you can bill $15,001 bucks for a job using an Apple that costs $15K, vs billing $15,001 bucks for a job using an $8K Z-series - which will you do?As many have noted on this forum, a professional tool just needs to earn more than it costs to be viable.
Apple has finally, completely, eliminated any meaning for the term "pro".
This is the only reason why Apple is still somehow relevant in the video business, but the writing is on the wall1) I also have a lot of ProRes contracted deliverables). So, for me at least, the Apple tax is a bargain. Not claiming that's true for all.
...
In terms of thermals. The spatial area of the iMac is probably rather suitable forma factor to deal with thermals as it's a large area due to it matching the screen and they can add depth without it being every noticed or appearing on your desktop (deeper case) so to work with and airflow may not be as much as a problem as people perceive. Also noise I would imagine will not spill out as much from behind a large wide plate as much as it might from a box. So it might not be an issue in reality, assuming they use quiet fans etc. etc.
.
We're all just speculating, but my guess is that a base 7,1 would come in configured about like a base iMac Pro, spec-wise (but with expand-ability) and cost-wise (perhaps a little less on cost given that it won't have a mandatory screen, unless they prefer pushing the iMacs*).
laptops and desktops are bought with three year all-inclusive warranties, subjected to capital expenditure depreciation for three years, and replaced when they are amortized and the warranty expires (at the same time).
Probably about right - my guess would be that they're not going to price it so that a Mac Pro + 5k display costs less than an iMac Pro.
I wonder if the new Mac Pro is going to be as upgradeable as people seem to be hoping. Nothing in the April mea culpa interview promises user upgradeability and they use "upgrade", "update" etc. in the context of Apple keeping the product up-to-date.
- but then I'd probably be spending my own money and hoping to get something that was likely to last me 5-10 years. However, Apple's target market may well be dominated by 3-year-business-leasers - and there's absolutely no incentive for Apple to let them get away with using cheap third party RAM and SSD from day one.
I'm sure Apple will refuse to see it, but the only reason I'm still rolling with 7-10 year old tech is that the 4-year-old tech they offered did not actually meet my needs. If they'd had a mac pro that was of some use to me available in 2013 i'd have been all over it.There is a huge gap between 3 year churn and folks squatting on stuff from 7-10 years
[doublepost=1497678072][/doublepost]Not if they truly make the MP configurable. Not everyone needs 8+ cores and the best graphics cards money can buy. A LOT of people (like myself) use the tower for expandability (drive bays), user configurability (RAM slots), low noise (have yet to hear a quiet iMac or MBP under heavy load) and greater choice for display options. (not everyone needs 4 & 5K displays).
I didn't consider the nMP because lack of internal expandability, low yet expensive internal drive storage, and having to pay for a 2nd graphics card I'd never use. Love my 2012 cheese grater!
Apple should just drop imac pro and give us user upgradable ability mac pro and take our money.
With all due to respect, why do you assume they wouldnt? Why do you assume as if you work for apple? Because they knew they couldnt upgrade with nmp.I've got to be honest with you, but opinions like this bemuse me.
Over the last 20+ years from the days of USENET to these forum boards, I have seen Apple enthusiasts beg and lament for a configurable tower that wouldn't charge "pro" prices. These are usually people who want (pro) Macs at commodity or DIY PC prices.
Here's the truth guys. Make an effort to accept and roll with it...it's not going to happen. That's not the way Apple rolls.
It didn't roll that way when Steve was alive, and it certainly will not roll that way with Tim Cook. Whether you like it or not, for better or for worse, Apple with Jobs and now post-Jobs as a profit leader will likely never sell hardware, particularly desktop/workstation hardware, at cost. You are not going to get a tower that you can put your own CPU in. It will likely come with the 8-core Xeon as a base and ramp up from there. Perhaps you go dual core with another module. Perhaps you will be able to run multiple GPUs and use AMD GPUs (NVidias will be perhaps not completely unsupported, but dis-incentivized).
It's not going to be cheap because Apple, especially now, doesn't do cheap. You want cheap, you're going to have to keep Hackintoshing. The high end specced-out Mac Pro will likely be five figures (probably approaching $15,000 or so), and folks that can pay that will for their needs because they probably spend tons of money on speed and storage. The Mac Pro isn't intended, and never has been, for enthusiasts who like having the latest, greatest and fastest Macs for bragging and gaming purposes. A person spending their cash for those purposes are wasting their money, in my opinion.
[doublepost=1497678072][/doublepost]
With all due respect, why keep asking this from Apple when we all know that this isn't what they do?
Perhaps with this new Mac Pro, it will be better than the round can version, but it probably won't quite be the DIY PC either.
I'm sure Apple will refuse to see it, but the only reason I'm still rolling with 7-10 year old tech is that the 4-year-old tech they offered did not actually meet my needs. If they'd had a mac pro that was of some use to me available in 2013 i'd have been all over it.