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pcconvert
Oct 4, 2010, 12:30 PM
By no means I'd like to start flames, this is just a professional thought and question on a professional board so please don't flame me.

With the current state of Apple's support for Pro world, setback in FCP development etc. did anyone with certain (multimedia) apps thought of switching back to Windows?

I researched CUDA support and run across a thread on Adobe forum which pretty summed up my thoughts. Here are excerpts of thoughts from the thread:


- These days when I am in front of the computer, I am either in the cloud or in one of the Adobe Production Premium products or Lightroom.

- Frankly it really does not matter. there is absolutely no point to buying an Apple unless you are runing Logic or Final Cut.

- they are over priced and underperfoming of a windows system.

- OSX has major issues with properly using multicore.
so 12 cores now rather than 8 is well useless. (even logic cant use the 8 correctly or FC)

- add to that the C-State issues with Apple EFI and you have a very pretty and expensive toy.

- and this is coming from an Apple dealer:
i would have been far more excited if Apple had anounced a new OS that actualy worked rather than 12 cores.

- it seems increasingly clear to me that sooner or later I will be back in the Windows fold. After all this time waiting for new Mac Pro's, I had expected something a lot bolder from Apple - maybe something to leapfrog the competition. Geez, not even USB 3.

- Yup, it is definitely looking like switching back to Windows is a no-brainer. I will save enough with the switch to buy the new Quadro 5000 (which was announced today with Windows support).

- I've been holding off the switch back to windows but I think I'm going to do it.I honestly believe apple is abandoning content creators for content consumers. Makes good business sense for them but does not give me the warm-and-fuzzies for investing in a $5K plus machine.

- IMHO, for content creation, the adobe / apple combination has gone from top of the heap to bottom of the barrel over time. Too bad.

- I thought when I switched to a Mac in 2006 my days of spending too much time configuring computer hardware were over, but now it kind of makes sense to switch BACK to a PC...



... and finally:

- Although my switch several years ago to Mac made sense at the time, I think the move I just made is a good one - even if Apple had come out with new Mac Pro's better suited to video editing. I have been saying that the switch to Mac was like the time I tried out being a vegetarian. It is so good to be eating meat again!

What do you think?

P.S. My nickname pcconvert says that I switched (me and family) from Win to Mac 2 years ago (bought 4MBPs, mac mini and recently 27 iMac). But now, for my multimedia apps I find that I don't really care what environment am I using. As long as it is fast, trouble free and offers good value. Which - it seems to me - building a Win content creation rig at a third of the price of Mac which works faster and better then Mac (I guess I am too focused on APP...) - Win7 64 just may work better (for me) then OSX.



beaker7
Oct 4, 2010, 12:59 PM
- they are over priced and underperfoming of a windows system.

Correct for single CPU. Incorrect for dual CPU.

- OSX has major issues with properly using multicore.
so 12 cores now rather than 8 is well useless. (even logic cant use the 8 correctly or FC)


umm...what? Agree that Final Cut could (and will) be better optimized for multi-core. But this has nothing to do with some limitation in OSX. If a particular software you use scales poorly, contact the developer. Well-written software that is cross platform for OSX and Windows scales equally well.

If you are talking about Adobe and After Effects, well, their multi-core implementation on BOTH platforms is horrendous.

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 12:59 PM
I'm not entirely sure any of that makes any sense. OS X can use 12 cores just fine, it's just the software that's been hardcoded for 8 cores. Any 8 core limits you hit are going to exist on Windows as well for cross platform apps. When developers update their apps to use 12 cores, it'll be fine.

Most developers lock in an upper limit of cores they allow their app to use, it helps them optimize their code, it has nothing to do with the OS. Whoever suggested that this is an OS X problem, frankly, doesn't have a clue.

High end GPU's has been kind of an issue, although that really depends on your work. If you spend time in something like Smoke, I could see you being annoyed by it. But it's not a major deal for most people. The Radeon 5870 is just fine.

Mac Pros are pretty price competitive. Not sure what the deal is there.

Major Reeves
Oct 4, 2010, 01:28 PM
No need to rant.
If it doesn't suit your needs, switch.

c0052350
Oct 4, 2010, 01:53 PM
Apple always makes me laugh, especially Jobs they tout about great new features such as opencl and take for ever to impliment them in their software. What happened to lead by example.

I agree with the OP time for switching is upon me too.

Being a long time mac user one thing that really is beginning to put me off macs is the zeolots can take any critisism againt their beloved system as though it's their very own child.

Grow up and admit apple's software is lagging in every department compared to adobe's

MacVibe
Oct 4, 2010, 01:56 PM
Whenever the time rolls around to upgrade then I consider my options and I wouldn't flame anyone for doing the same. Laptops are a lot different than desktops in how I interact with them (I use the laptop screen, I use the laptop keyboard, I use the laptop trackpad, etc.). For a desktop, you may have a favorite mouse, keyboard, and monitor so there is no reason to upgrade those things "just because" you need more computing horsepower.

If you have the luxury of being focused on a single suite, like adobe, then it honestly may not make the slightest bit of difference what OS you are running on. If the most you need is a fast four-core machine you can get a i5 pc for less than $900. However, if you really think you need those 8 (or twelve) cores, then the mac pro is on par for cost with a similarly equipped pc. On the software side of things, developers, sooner or later, are going to need to build their software for an arbitrary number of cores (or have it built on install).

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 02:02 PM
Apple always makes me laugh, especially Jobs they tout about great new features such as opencl and take for ever to impliment them in their software. What happened to lead by example.

I agree with the OP time for switching is upon me too.

Being a long time mac user one thing that really is beginning to put me off macs is the zeolots can take any critisism againt their beloved system as though it's their very own child.

Grow up and admit apple's software is lagging in every department compared to adobe's

Where do you feel Apple needs to implement OpenCL in their software?

OpenCL is not something that can be used for general programming. Like CUDA, it only works in specific circumstances.

I work in both Final Cut and CS5 often, and I write software for both. I was on the beta for CS5. CS5 is a total mess, on both Mac and Windows. FCS isn't much better, but CS5 is really not great.

philipma1957
Oct 4, 2010, 02:04 PM
Being a long time mac user one thing that really is beginning to put me off macs is the zeolots can take any critisism againt their beloved system as though it's their very own child.


I am a member of the mac mini 123 forum since 2006 I have upgraded and sold over 100 mac mini's. I have given thousands of dollars worth of advice for free on the forum and have tested dozens of pieces of gear for free. Many of the highest mac mini xbench scores and many of the highest geekbench scores are posted be me. Some I own most were sold or built for others> My stick was super big or fast minis that can be turned back to oem in under 30 minutes. When the 2010 mac mini came out I was very critical of it. TWO reasons 98 percent cosmetic and 2 percent performance over the 2009 machines. I still maintain only a

fashion or form person would buy the 2010 mini. I have been ripped by lots of mac freaks over this. I can honestly tell you I have only owned macs and that I have run computers since 1972! My next computer will be this.

http://www.asrock.com/nettop/overview.asp?Model=Vision%203D%20137B

scottsjack
Oct 4, 2010, 02:15 PM
Many of the quoted comments make a lot of sense. Even though I just bought a new MP for semi-professional use and really like OS X I'm not sure that Apple is committed to anything more than iOS for media sales and media/family use machines like iMacs and minis.

Based on my experience with Aperture 3 and Photoshop CS5 I would absolutely look to Adobe first for pro apps. A3 does some nice things but is a slow running mess compared to CS5. It's that way on both my MBP and MP.

Adobe and Intuit are a lot more committed to Windows platforms. My Late 2009 mini 2.66GHz runs XP Pro and Office 2003 without an OS X installation. Even though OS X uses up to 256MB of RAM for the NVidia card Windows reports that it's using 512MB! Media seems to play peppier on the mini via windows than it did under OS X. Maybe Windows utilizes the hardware more efficiently?

I'll definitely be upgrading my Windows PS CS3 to either CS5 or CS6 so I can remain in the upgrade program for that particular software license. Upgrading the mini to 8GB RAM, a WD 500GB Black HD and Windows 7 64-bit is about a $420.00 deal. I might do that just for a project as that would be a pretty nice, compact Windows machine.

maflynn
Oct 4, 2010, 02:19 PM
Apple always makes me laugh, especially Jobs they tout about great new features such as opencl and take for ever to impliment them in their software.
Agreed, we see some great technology coming from apple but they themselves don't even use it, or take forever to implement it.

Just look how long it took apple to convert the Finder from Carbon to Cocoa.

scottsjack
Oct 4, 2010, 02:53 PM
When the 2010 mac mini came out I was very critical of it. TWO reasons 98 percent cosmetic and 2 percent performance over the 2009 machines. I still maintain only a fashion or form person would buy the 2010 mini.

Agreed. I was looking forward to a more usable mini, maybe a 3.06GHz i3 chip and a basic ATI GPU as in the iMac. All we got was a perversion of Ives' make-it-thinner and make-it-aluminum design, totally useless for a desktop. A taller box could have housed a real desktop hard drive and some more ports. Needless to say, I'm done with minis. I'll leave them to the Apple TV/iPod crowd.

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 03:33 PM
Agreed, we see some great technology coming from apple but they themselves don't even use it, or take forever to implement it.

Just look how long it took apple to convert the Finder from Carbon to Cocoa.

Why did Finder need to be converted to Cocoa?

There is a lot of stuff in this thread that isn't really technically sound. Finder had some issues, but none of them had anything to do with Carbon.

nanofrog
Oct 4, 2010, 03:56 PM
Correct for single CPU. Incorrect for dual CPU.
If you're just looking at the computer system, this is holds true. Apple's pricing on the Single CPU systems in particular, is absolutely disgusting.

But if there's additional hardware needed, a Windows or Linux based system can end up with an advantage due to the greater availability of potential parts (i.e. hardware RAID can be implemented cheaper in a PC due to the case configurations, as it can reduce or eliminate the need for external drive bays).

Ultimately, it depends on the specific requirements of the user, so additional hardware requirements that can have a notable cost difference between Macs and PC's may or may not be applicable from one individual to another.

Ultimately, the software should be the primary factor in deciding what system to go for IMO (whether it's that a user already has a significant investment in OS X software and training, one OS version has a feature set that can't be lived without,...).

I'm not entirely sure any of that makes any sense. OS X can use 12 cores just fine, it's just the software that's been hardcoded for 8 cores. Any 8 core limits you hit are going to exist on Windows as well for cross platform apps. When developers update their apps to use 12 cores, it'll be fine.
Keep in mind however, that software tends to be developed at different times for the developed platforms (available resources and scheduling). So new features may reach one platform before another, including fixes/updates such as true n core multi-threading (if possible).

Sadly, if they port one platform to another rather than truly develop from a platform specific methodology from the beginning, it tends to be a mess.

Even though I just bought a new MP for semi-professional use and really like OS X I'm not sure that Apple is committed to anything more than iOS for media sales and media/family use machines like iMacs and minis.
Going by recent history, they definitely seem to be more focused on the devices than the computers. And of the computer systems, more attention goes to the laptop and consumer grade desktop systems. Makes sense sadly, as there's more money in any of these areas than the Mac Pro or XServe.

Agreed, we see some great technology coming from apple but they themselves don't even use it, or take forever to implement it.
The focus has shifted to devices it seems (iOS based gear), and they've limited programming resources (not seen any evidence that they've gone on a hiring binge to pick up the slack, as they've apparently too many projects and too few people to cover them all properly). So we're seeing increased lag times in product development, and an increased bug count make it into the shipping products. :(

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 04:43 PM
Keep in mind however, that software tends to be developed at different times for the developed platforms (available resources and scheduling). So new features may reach one platform before another, including fixes/updates such as true n core multi-threading (if possible).

Sadly, if they port one platform to another rather than truly develop from a platform specific methodology from the beginning, it tends to be a mess.

True, but usually the scheduler is cross platform regardless of the thread technology, and it's just a constant that the developer needs to up.

I know that, for example, very little in CS5 is Mac native code. The UI is not even real Cocoa. CS5 is using an abstraction library, which just makes it awful. Software I've written for CS5 behaves much worse than it does under other apps because of this. I can't even get normal copy/paste working because Adobe isn't using native Cocoa text handling. I have a few choice words for describing CS5 suite that I can't say here... It's an awful awful program, and the only reason it's balanced out currently is because it's 64 bit, and Premiere has the Mercury playback engine. When Apple does ship a Cocoa native Final Cut, which they will, I would avoid CS5 at all costs. It's barely a native Mac program, and just watching Console when any of the apps are running shows what a half-a** port it was.

I also, separately, have it on good authority that most the After Effects/Premiere team isn't even based in the US anymore. It was mostly outsourced.

As for multicore scheduling, if the scheduler wasn't well designed. You could end up with a backup in the scheduler, resulting in a overall speed loss, which is why these sorts of things are hard coded.

It's a good example of why people should be adopting LibDispatch, actually, as this is one of the magical things that LibDispatch works to solve.

scottsjack
Oct 4, 2010, 05:31 PM
I know that, for example, very little in CS5 is Mac native code. The UI is not even real Cocoa. CS5 is using an abstraction library, which just makes it awful. Software I've written for CS5 behaves much worse than it does under other apps because of this. I can't even get normal copy/paste working because Adobe isn't using native Cocoa text handling. I have a few choice words for describing CS5 suite that I can't say here... It's an awful awful program, and the only reason it's balanced out currently is because it's 64 bit, and Premiere has the Mercury playback engine. When Apple does ship a Cocoa native Final Cut, which they will, I would avoid CS5 at all costs. It's barely a native Mac program, and just watching Console when any of the apps are running shows what a half-a** port it was.

I also, separately, have it on good authority that most the After Effects/Premiere team isn't even based in the US anymore. It was mostly outsourced.

As for multicore scheduling, if the scheduler wasn't well designed. You could end up with a backup in the scheduler, resulting in a overall speed loss, which is why these sorts of things are hard coded.

It's a good example of why people should be adopting LibDispatch, actually, as this is one of the magical things that LibDispatch works to solve.

Yet for everything that I can do in both PS CS5 and A3 goes way faster in CS5. Sharpening, correcting CA or saving raws as TIF just blitzes in Camera Raw andr Photoshop while just plugging along in A3.

Photoshop on my 2.4GHz C2D MBP is much faster than A3 on my MP and I don't know why.

Oberhammer
Oct 4, 2010, 05:49 PM
You can always do what I do. I use both. I have a PC that I built to use Adobe Creative Suite CS5 and I have a 12 core Mac Pro system that I use for FC Studio 3.0. I like both systems and I use both and I feel that I have the best of both worlds.

If a new FC Studio comes out, I will be ready for it.

In the PC, I use the Nvidia GTX 480 and in the Mac Pro I have the 5870.

Just my 2 cents.

Brian

VirtualRain
Oct 4, 2010, 05:53 PM
While I agree that the differences between OSX and Windows as an application execution environment for Adobe CS are probably insignificant... OSX does seem more stable and snappy to me.

And while this is completely anecdotal, OSX seems to get more performance out of similar or even lesser hardware than Windows. For example, OSX and all my apps ran great on my 1.6GHz Mac Air with just 2GB of RAM. My Dell work laptop with a 2.5GHz processor and 4GB of RAM running XP with our corporate AV client, seems like a dog in comparison.

However, the biggest advantage to a Mac running OSX for me, really has more to do with the Apple ecosystem. As the owner of an iPhone, an iPad, a Mac Mini with Plex for HTPC, and previously an Apple Laptop, there was no comparison to the convenience offered by things like cloud syncing of bookmarks, keychain, settings, email, calendar, docs, etc. via MobileMe, Time Machine for backups, and the ability to keep my iTunes libraries in sync across several machines. That stuff is just gold for a multi-device/machine user for which Windows has no real answer that's anywhere near as simple or convenient.

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 05:58 PM
Yet for everything that I can do in both PS CS5 and A3 goes way faster in CS5. Sharpening, correcting CA or saving raws as TIF just blitzes in Camera Raw andr Photoshop while just plugging along in A3.

Photoshop on my 2.4GHz C2D MBP is much faster than A3 on my MP and I don't know why.

Photoshop is also in pretty bad shape. The entire thing is custom UI. The image processing might be fast, but the app itself is falling apart.

Aperture and FXPlug, on the other hand, are in way better technically, and they're going to transition much better as Apple rev's the products.

A lot of CS5 is even based on a lot of Carbon-y emulation. It's not pretty.

All I'm saying is, long term, don't count Apple out, and certainly don't expect that CS Suite is going to hold together. The code base seems to be a lot like Windows, it's just a few patches from falling apart.

Adobe should have taken the time to do a proper recode of their Mac apps and they didn't.

MacHamster68
Oct 4, 2010, 06:30 PM
I am a member of the mac mini 123 forum since 2006 I have upgraded and sold over 100 mac mini's. I have given thousands of dollars worth of advice for free on the forum and have tested dozens of pieces of gear for free. Many of the highest mac mini xbench scores and many of the highest geekbench scores are posted be me. Some I own most were sold or built for others> My stick was super big or fast minis that can be turned back to oem in under 30 minutes. When the 2010 mac mini came out I was very critical of it. TWO reasons 98 percent cosmetic and 2 percent performance over the 2009 machines. I still maintain only a

fashion or form person would buy the 2010 mini. I have been ripped by lots of mac freaks over this. I can honestly tell you I have only owned macs and that I have run computers since 1972! My next computer will be this.

http://www.asrock.com/nettop/overview.asp?Model=Vision%203D%20137B


i have to agree , and i really like that asrock mini , looks like the mini Apple should have build instead of that ugly unibody thingy
and i guess it will come lower in price despite more useful ports, so thumbs up for the asrock mini ;)

nevertheless i am still a Mac fan , but i am more fan of older Mac's , from a time when apple did make the leaps forward and did set benchmarks
but today all is about a design that not really pretty in my opinion , but others just love it and windows switchers come in masses and buy Macs because they can run windows and still say they own a Mac , and who can blame them, if you look around all other AIO's are smaller ,and less pretty and nettops bigger out of cheap materials
and most important for most ,dont have the Apple logo ,as Apple still stands for high priced computers , and its a status symbol , nobody says "wow" if you have a acer AIO on your desk , but everyone says "wow you must do well if you can afford a iMac " even if its a 4 year old one like mine and thats the youngest among my 14 Mac's so people who visit me think i must be a multi millionaire because i can afford so many Mac's:confused:lucky they dont see my bank statements and have no idea that some are already over 10 years old :D
Apple sells a image now not a computer

its like in car world nobody looks at your volkswagen phaeton but everybody looks at your bentley continental despite they are the same car underneath

nanofrog
Oct 4, 2010, 06:34 PM
True, but usually the scheduler is cross platform regardless of the thread technology, and it's just a constant that the developer needs to up.

I know that, for example, very little in CS5 is Mac native code. The UI is not even real Cocoa. CS5 is using an abstraction library, which just makes it awful. Software I've written for CS5 behaves much worse than it does under other apps because of this. I can't even get normal copy/paste working because Adobe isn't using native Cocoa text handling. I have a few choice words for describing CS5 suite that I can't say here... It's an awful awful program, and the only reason it's balanced out currently is because it's 64 bit, and Premiere has the Mercury playback engine. When Apple does ship a Cocoa native Final Cut, which they will, I would avoid CS5 at all costs. It's barely a native Mac program, and just watching Console when any of the apps are running shows what a half-a** port it was.
It's a sad fact that ported software tends to suffer in some way or another that the user can notice (performance, UI, or both).

From what I've seen (and heard from colleagues), is that it's always boils down to money (ports and partial re-writes are performed rather than total re-writes when they're needed <libraries, core,...>, as it's quite expensive). And as we all know, corporations are in it for the money (invest as little as possible to get something shipped = maximum ROI).

I also, separately, have it on good authority that most the After Effects/Premiere team isn't even based in the US anymore. It was mostly outsourced.
I don't follow these applications all that well, but I'm not surprised that it's happened. Always comes back to greed.... errr.... maximized profit margins. :rolleyes:

As for multicore scheduling, if the scheduler wasn't well designed. You could end up with a backup in the scheduler, resulting in a overall speed loss, which is why these sorts of things are hard coded.

It's a good example of why people should be adopting LibDispatch, actually, as this is one of the magical things that LibDispatch works to solve.
The base code seems old from what gets posted here on MR (built ages ago, so the multi-threaded operation is all over the place, as they've been unwilling to re-develop it properly with newer tools).

If I had to guess, a good portion of the programming tools used were probably developed in-house, so switching over would mean having to re-develop the tools essentially from scratch (make sure it's able to work properly with newer libraries), as they'd have a mess when attempting to combine it with the mess they've got now.

jnpy!$4g3cwk
Oct 4, 2010, 06:51 PM
My next computer will be this.

http://www.asrock.com/nettop/overview.asp?Model=Vision%203D%20137B
I'm not quite following you. This looks like an interesting package. I don't see an OS anywhere. Are you planning on using Windows 7, Linux, or try to Hackintosh it (difficult to make the BD player work I should think)? The price seems pretty high without an OS.

bearcatrp
Oct 4, 2010, 06:51 PM
I am a member of the mac mini 123 forum since 2006 I have upgraded and sold over 100 mac mini's. I have given thousands of dollars worth of advice for free on the forum and have tested dozens of pieces of gear for free. Many of the highest mac mini xbench scores and many of the highest geekbench scores are posted be me. Some I own most were sold or built for others> My stick was super big or fast minis that can be turned back to oem in under 30 minutes. When the 2010 mac mini came out I was very critical of it. TWO reasons 98 percent cosmetic and 2 percent performance over the 2009 machines. I still maintain only a

fashion or form person would buy the 2010 mini. I have been ripped by lots of mac freaks over this. I can honestly tell you I have only owned macs and that I have run computers since 1972! My next computer will be this.

http://www.asrock.com/nettop/overview.asp?Model=Vision%203D%20137B

Wish I would have seen this before buying my mini. Apple should have put at least a i3 or an i5 in the new mini. Probably my last Mac I buy. Sold my 2008 Mac pro to build my next editing machine. Close to half the price of a new Mac pro. If apple doesn't hit a home run on the next set of apps, I think allot of apple users will go back to windows. Don't get me wrong, apple does make some outstanding products. But the prices are getting a bit to high for ease of use.

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 06:57 PM
Wish I would have seen this before buying my mini. Apple should have put at least a i3 or an i5 in the new mini. Probably my last Mac I buy. Sold my 2008 Mac pro to build my next editing machine. Close to half the price of a new Mac pro. If apple doesn't hit a home run on the next set of apps, I think allot of apple users will go back to windows. Don't get me wrong, apple does make some outstanding products. But the prices are getting a bit to high for ease of use.

Again, as I'm not sure what a lot of complaints in this thread are about...

Why are we disappointed the Mini does not have an i3? The Mini has never been the sort of machine that could even make serious use of an i3.

The Mac Mini has never been an editing machine. Never ever. It's totally not the market. I don't know why anyone would even seriously be disappointed in the mini not being an editing machine.

As far as the graphics, that's pretty simple... Neither the new or old mini has the case profile for one of the ATI GPU's that ship in the iMac, and the ATI GPU's don't currently do H.264 acceleration. The 9400m is more than capable for light editing. (Again, I'm not sure why anyone would be expecting to do serious editing on a Mini in the first place...)

Not to mention, if Apple used an i3, they'd have to adopt Intel Integrated Graphics. So again, I'm not entirely sure what this is about. It seems like the i3, when you think about it, would be a far worse choice for a Mini.

bearcatrp
Oct 4, 2010, 07:13 PM
Don't think anyone mentioned using the mini as a editing machine. But the fact is apple still using older chips where most pc manufactures moved to the i series processors. A dual core chip with hperthreading would have been a nice upgrade for the mini. Another issue on the mini is why only SL server for a mini with 2 hard drives. Personally, a mini a little taller with an ssd and a 500gb and a DVD would have been almost perfect.

Gomff
Oct 4, 2010, 07:21 PM
Apple do seem to be more focused on their lifestyle hardware and software rather than their pro stuff at the moment. To be honest, I think the only way it'll get better is just by virtue of mainstream tech and CPU's becoming fast enough to do pro work on....The i7 iMac is pretty quick for example, and because of it's looks, is finding itself in more and more trendy design agencies where previously only a Mac Pro would've sufficed.

I'm thinking that Apple have lost interest in the high end. They can get their share price up much quicker by bringing out a new iteration of an iPhone or iPad. They also clearly don't like the idea of pro users upgrading their systems and in the process lengthening the time before they can sell a new pro system. They'd much rather wean us onto a sealed unit that has a finite technology lifespan....To hell with the environmental issues of junking a monitor everytime you want a new Mac. :rolleyes:

Their spat with Adobe hasn't helped matters either. I can't comment on the codebase but the creative gravity that Apple + Adobe used to carry is pretty much gone these days. Apple are stepping on more and more of Adobe's toes with Aperture, Final Cut, Logic + Soundtrack Pro etc.

Apple is about selling lifestyle goods that all work together, which in fairness they do very well. If I consider switching, it always comes back to the same thing of not having OS X...It's the main reason I couldn't switch. Windows 7 is better than previous versions but it still doesn't have the integration, functionality and ease of use that OS X does. :)

bearcatrp
Oct 4, 2010, 07:45 PM
Totally agree on the stability of OS X. I almost bought the i7 iMac but it still has issues. Don't know why but seems apple's QC has gone down over the years. My 2006 24 inch iMac is still going strong. Still have tiger on it too. Both of my 2006 and 2008 Mac pros had only small hiccups but still rock solid. 2009 and beyond the problems grew. With cloud computing gaining ground and allot of services to use the cloud for our needs, FOR A PRICE, seems this is the direction computing is trying to go. Don't think I will upload anything to get edited or processed. But if they price the tools high enough out of most folks reach, like the Mac pro, then your stuck between a rock and a hard place. Spend the big bucks for do it your self equipment of smaller price for them to do it. :(

jnpy!$4g3cwk
Oct 4, 2010, 08:03 PM
Apple should have put at least a i3 or an i5 in the new mini.
What is the advantage of an i3 over a C2D? Core i5-5xx series is where the performance delta starts.

philipma1957
Oct 4, 2010, 08:24 PM
I'm not quite following you. This looks like an interesting package. I don't see an OS anywhere. Are you planning on using Windows 7, Linux, or try to Hackintosh it (difficult to make the BD player work I should think)? The price seems pretty high without an OS.

Well I mentioned this in this thread because I never purchased or owned a pc. used them but never wanted to own one. the thread was really more of a I am switching to pc/Windows theme. I am kind of looking into doing windows /pc as an owner not just a user of the library's pc or my workplace's pc. So I would buy the machine above and run it as a windows /pc.

As long as I am ranting on this I wrote 50 threads (on mac mini 123)
that the mini should become that what that pc is. A bit taller for a better processor and hdd with decent hdd connections.

Instead the new mini is a weak machine really over priced
(real pretty though kind of a like hot chick that does not do that thing. you know the thing you really like but she looks good walking down the street hold on to my arm).


Back to mac vs pc's I own an iMac and while it is fast has no hdd connections that are worthwhile. so I went out and purchased the Mac Pro. Happy with the Mac Pro just po'd that apple would not make a decent piece of gear like the pc mini in the link.

philipma1957
Oct 4, 2010, 08:31 PM
.... Personally, a mini a little taller with an ssd and a 500gb and a DVD would have been almost perfect.
just add a usb3 or an esata to that mix and I would not own the pro. the choice is ridiculous . mac mini or Mac Pro with nothing inbetween.

The imac is not an in between due to no esata or usb3 connections and a next to impossible hdd to fix or update.

MacHamster68
Oct 4, 2010, 08:55 PM
ok the link i post now is old and in terms of spec a bit outdated , but there had been mods that i liked to see and this mini mod would fit right in between even today , with just one addition it would be perfect , 2 pci slots job done apple the ideas had been in front of your eyes
http://www.applegazette.com/mac-mini/mac-mini-mac-pro-mod-is-supremely-impressive/

goMac
Oct 4, 2010, 09:16 PM
Don't think anyone mentioned using the mini as a editing machine. But the fact is apple still using older chips where most pc manufactures moved to the i series processors. A dual core chip with hperthreading would have been a nice upgrade for the mini. Another issue on the mini is why only SL server for a mini with 2 hard drives. Personally, a mini a little taller with an ssd and a 500gb and a DVD would have been almost perfect.

And again, adopting the i3 would have meant using intel integrated graphics, which would have been an overall downgrade.

Hyperthreading is also not a major deal.

Really, there still isn't much reason to put an i series onto a Mac mini.

If you're upset that the Mac Mini isn't a mini tower, that's really not the same thing, nor is that fair to the mini.

bearcatrp
Oct 5, 2010, 06:42 AM
At least apple could have put a processor with a bit more umph in it. something closer to 3ghz would have been nice. :rolleyes:

mjsmke
Oct 5, 2010, 07:08 AM
The main reason i use Apple computers is for the OS. I've used Windows in the past and even tried Win 7. Win 7 is rubbish. I crashed it in less than 10 mins by trying to open a few large Tiff files (1.5GB each) in Photoshop. It was a lot slower than my Mac Pro and it had a better CPU. It was like driving a Ferrari with the brakes on all the time and looked ugly.

But if Windows is for you then do whats best for you.

chrono1081
Oct 5, 2010, 07:16 AM
I don't know what thread you were reading but its full of mis-information. That being said if you want to switch switch. Not to mention this whole "Apple hates pro-users" idea from people is nonsense. Apple doesn't have near the amount of people working on a project that other companies do, and this is part of the reason why their software is so much less buggy then others. People never seem to realize that.

Also seeing some of your quotes I have a hard time believing this isn't flame bait since some of these are quite outlandish.



[I]
- Frankly it really does not matter. there is absolutely no point to buying an Apple unless you are runing Logic or Final Cut.

This is completely incorrect. It all depends on your usage. For me, Windows can't handle what I do. I used to have a $7k HP xeon workstation at work that I would work on. The Macbook pro in my signature ran circles around it so I'd bring my MBP to work and work off of it.


- they are over priced and underperfoming of a windows system.


Definitely not true. See my comment above regarding performance. Not to mention you can throw a huge workload at Mac OS and it runs it like a champ. Can't say the same about Windows. You get what you pay for.


- OSX has major issues with properly using multicore.
so 12 cores now rather than 8 is well useless. (even logic cant use the 8 correctly or FC)

Works fine for everyone I know. The ONLY issue I remember seeing is with 6 cores and Logic which I'm sure will be fixed in an update. Multicore programming is insanely tricky. Its easiest to implement it on Macs with Grand Central Dispatch.


- add to that the C-State issues with Apple EFI and you have a very pretty and expensive toy.

Get real. Non-existant problem.

- and this is coming from an Apple dealer:
i would have been far more excited if Apple had anounced a new OS that actualy worked rather than 12 cores.

This is definitely flame bait. To say OSX doesn't work is ridiculous. What doesn't work about it? My system always turns on and is perfectly fine, never crashes, never gets viruses or spyware. What doesn't work again?


- it seems increasingly clear to me that sooner or later I will be back in the Windows fold. After all this time waiting for new Mac Pro's, I had expected something a lot bolder from Apple - maybe something to leapfrog the competition. Geez, not even USB 3.

USB 3 is dead before its out of the gate. Hence why Intel isn't supporting it. You aren't going to have an easy time finding it on windows machines either. Plus everyone who needs speed uses eSata anyway.


- I've been holding off the switch back to windows but I think I'm going to do it.I honestly believe apple is abandoning content creators for content consumers. Makes good business sense for them but does not give me the warm-and-fuzzies for investing in a $5K plus machine.

Yet another unfounded opinion. Apple makes excellent software. Like I stated above, they don't have tons of programmers and software engineers doing nothing but churning out software like other companies, but what they put out works and works well for a long time. I can't say the same about the big name companies who have tons of software engineers and programmers (Adobe and their CS3/CS4 fiasco).

If you want to go windows, go ahead but please don't come pollute our threads, we have enough of that already. But after reading and responding to the quotes I'm 100% sure this is flame bait (which I fell for). I used to work in IT and can tell you, if you think the Windows world is trouble free your sadly mistaken.

Luis Ortega
Oct 5, 2010, 07:56 AM
Although my switch several years ago to Mac made sense at the time, I think the move I just made is a good one - even if Apple had come out with new Mac Pro's better suited to video editing. I have been saying that the switch to Mac was like the time I tried out being a vegetarian. It is so good to be eating meat again!
What do you think?

I am feeling the same way.
I made a serious commitment to apple a few years ago simply to be able to run FCP because then it was better than Premiere.
But lately, I have seen apple become a phone and gadget company and neglect the software and hardware that I find important.
I do not see that trend changing in the future either, which is the worst part of the situation.
The next time that I buy a computer, I will be looking very hard at which platform is better and offers a more reliable future.
Right now apple is not doing it for me, and the danger for it is that soon others will be challenging it for gadget supremacy as well. There are some fantastic smart phones already out there and soon we will be seeing tablets that compete vey well with the ipad. By abandoning its original computer mission, apple may find that it lost those customers, and when its gadgets don't stand out from the crowd and cost a lot more, they will lose that market as well.
Then they'll be left only with a rump of fanboy types who will pay ever more for their stuff without giving it a moment's critical thought.
It's a shame really.

jnpy!$4g3cwk
Oct 5, 2010, 08:25 AM
USB 3 is dead before its out of the gate. Hence why Intel isn't supporting it. You aren't going to have an easy time finding it on windows machines either. Plus everyone who needs speed uses eSata anyway.



USB 3 is new to the marketplace -- no way to tell how far it will go. But, there are very few products out there yet. This is not a case of everyone else having something that Apple doesn't, so, I can't imagine who would make a system choice based on USB 3 at this point.

philipma1957
Oct 5, 2010, 08:34 AM
I am feeling the same way.
...

But lately, I have seen apple become a phone and gadget company and neglect the software and hardware that I find important.
I do not see that trend changing in the future either, which is the worst part of the situation.
The next time that I buy a computer, I will be looking very hard at which platform is better and offers a more reliable future.
...

It's a shame really.


I feel just about the same. Lots of little tiny mobile gadgets. I don't need them or use them very much at all.



USB 3 is new to the marketplace -- no way to tell how far it will go. But, there are very few products out there yet. This is not a case of everyone else having something that Apple doesn't, so, I can't imagine who would make a system choice based on USB 3 at this point. I FOUND this piece of gear a 3tb usb3 seagate enclosure ;

http://cgi.ebay.com/3TB-Seagate-FreeAgent-GoFlex-STAC3000100-Hard-Drive-/180570470117?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2a0ad6b6e5#ht_1630wt_1141

http://www.anandtech.com/show/3858/the-worlds-first-3tb-hdd-seagate-goflex-desk-3tb-review


looks useful a 3tb single drive at usb3 speeds.

maflynn
Oct 5, 2010, 08:41 AM
Why did Finder need to be converted to Cocoa?

There is a lot of stuff in this thread that isn't really technically sound. Finder had some issues, but none of them had anything to do with Carbon.

Apple wanting people to use cocoa and take advantages of what cocoa had to offer, including controls, the framework seemed to get more love then the carbon library.

My point is less of what's wrong with finder and more, that if apple is pushing a technology, they should be the ones using it first, i.e., eat their own dog food.

thejadedmonkey
Oct 5, 2010, 08:43 AM
I switched back, for most of my needs, and only use my MBP for final cut. Windows 7 isn't all that bad.

maflynn
Oct 5, 2010, 08:49 AM
I switched back, for most of my needs, and only use my MBP for final cut. Windows 7 isn't all that bad.

I built my own computer a few months ago, and it replaced my MacBook Pro. It was a great experience, as I had not done this since the days of the intel 486 - yikes that's a long time ago. :eek:

Anyways I loaded win7 and it was "ok" Win7 doesn't suck, its stable as some interesting features but all in all, I missed what OSX brought to the table. So much so, I converted my i7-930 into a hackintosh. While that was my long term goal, I decided to accelerate the time line because I missed OSX so much.

I can see the OPs perspective, the cost of hardware is so much cheaper and many of the apps are updated much more often then what apple provides. Still, there's something to be said about using OSX.

darlenea
Oct 5, 2010, 09:07 AM
I have just switched to a MacPro - no computer environment is perfect but so far I like it. Last Dec I had my son switch to an IMac - previously ever time he came home I had to spend several hours or more cleaning up his pc laptop even though I had it well set up with anti virus etc. I have not had to touch his Imac in the 9 months he has owned it - to me this is a very big deal. Darlenea

goMac
Oct 5, 2010, 12:55 PM
Apple wanting people to use cocoa and take advantages of what cocoa had to offer, including controls, the framework seemed to get more love then the carbon library.

My point is less of what's wrong with finder and more, that if apple is pushing a technology, they should be the ones using it first, i.e., eat their own dog food.

What technologies exactly?

People seem to say things like that, but with no specific examples.

The entire reason Finder was Carbon was that developers were complaining that they didn't think Apple would support Carbon, so Apple ate their own dog food. Originally, Finder was Cocoa, and Apple recoded it in Carbon.

Finder's issues had nothing to do with Carbon. And I say that as a developer who's totally behind Cocoa.

milo
Oct 6, 2010, 01:14 PM
I'd say if you're planning on running cross platform apps, in many cases you're better off with a windows machine. Especially since many devs seem to make the windows version a higher priority and end up with better performance on that side.

If you use FCS, your decision is whether you want to stick with it and hope for 64 bit and use of all cores in the next version. If this happens in the next 6-12 months, I'd think you'd be very happy staying on mac. If not, PC looks pretty good.

Audio apps are a similar case, there seems to be much better use of multiple cores and more 64 bit app and plugin options on the PC side. Hopefully that will change soon, but who knows?

RebootD
Oct 6, 2010, 04:34 PM
I can see the OPs perspective, the cost of hardware is so much cheaper and many of the apps are updated much more often then what apple provides. Still, there's something to be said about using OSX.

This is a huge personal dilemma for me as well. I needed a new Mac so I got the 09 Quad Mac Pro for $2200 + $400 in 3rd party RAM/HDDs etc. I could have built a similar i7 machine for half that amount. (Yes Xeon isn't the same as i7 but for my needs I couldn't care less). But I love OS X and everyone in my field uses Macs so it's easier from a collaboration point of view to stay with it.

Now I want to upgrade my video card because I'm starting to use Premiere/AE CS5 more and the only high end card is the illusive 5870 that is still 'unavailable'. On the PC side I'd have my choice of about 100+ makes and models. (And I don't edit enough to warrant a $1400 Quadro card) I could settle for a 5770 but that is a $129 card selling for $250.

The lack of choices + scarcity of upgrades that are available can be seriously frustrating.

goMac
Oct 6, 2010, 05:09 PM
This is a huge personal dilemma for me as well. I needed a new Mac so I got the 09 Quad Mac Pro for $2200 + $400 in 3rd party RAM/HDDs etc. I could have built a similar i7 machine for half that amount. (Yes Xeon isn't the same as i7 but for my needs I couldn't care less). But I love OS X and everyone in my field uses Macs so it's easier from a collaboration point of view to stay with it.

Tthat's the target market of the 27" iMac. They run AE and PPro smooth as butter, and they're good machines.

Honestly, if you're going to be spending serious time in AE/PPro, you probably want a six or eight core machine at least, more than you need the 5870. Not that a four core won't run it acceptably, but if you're going to be doing more serious work you want those cores. Four cores is a little light.

RebootD
Oct 6, 2010, 05:59 PM
Tthat's the target market of the 27" iMac. They run AE and PPro smooth as butter, and they're good machines.

Honestly, if you're going to be spending serious time in AE/PPro, you probably want a six or eight core machine at least, more than you need the 5870. Not that a four core won't run it acceptably, but if you're going to be doing more serious work you want those cores. Four cores is a little light.

Had an iMac and sold it. I hated the glassy shine and no expandability but that is just me. I love my NEC IPS (matte) display + RAID0 combo which wasn't available in any iMac at the time.

I also agree a 6/8 core would be much more efficient but I'm only doing a few small projects in them right now. (90% of my work is graphic/web design with some flash thrown in). If I start generating enough income with Pr/AE then I'll think about selling my 1.5yr old machine. ;)

But with the video card I have the stock GT120 and it's terrible. 512MB of VRAM and it can't render/play games worth a lick. Plus it seems to hate GPU acceleration in any Adobe app and I never had an issue with Macs + ATI cards in the past.

goMac
Oct 6, 2010, 06:41 PM
Had an iMac and sold it. I hated the glassy shine and no expandability but that is just me. I love my NEC IPS (matte) display + RAID0 combo which wasn't available in any iMac at the time.

I also agree a 6/8 core would be much more efficient but I'm only doing a few small projects in them right now. (90% of my work is graphic/web design with some flash thrown in). If I start generating enough income with Pr/AE then I'll think about selling my 1.5yr old machine. ;)

But with the video card I have the stock GT120 and it's terrible. 512MB of VRAM and it can't render/play games worth a lick. Plus it seems to hate GPU acceleration in any Adobe app and I never had an issue with Macs + ATI cards in the past.

I dunno, I have the GT 120 in one of my Mac Pros, and it's ok, not great. But it's kind of a massive leap from the GT 120 to the 5870. Surely there is a happy middle ground? :) Up until a few months ago we had the 4870 and the GTX 285, both of which were more than capable cards. There is still a Quadro available, with a new one coming this month....

The video card selection isn't THAT bad. The only issue I have is that there is no model of NVidia card available right now, which leaves a gapping CUDA hole, but for some reason NVidia is dragging their heals on that.

The GT 120's problems don't have anything to do with the VRAM really. 512 megs is a decent enough amount of VRAM, enough to handle 1080p with no issue. It's the GPU on it that's slow.

The GPU acceleration issues have to do with a) broken NVidia drivers in 10.6.3 and b) GPU acceleration sucking in general in AE. You're usually better turning GPU acceleration off on whatever platform you're working on.