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echoout

macrumors 6502a
Aug 15, 2007
600
16
Austin, Texas
Where are you? Most departments I know haven't had that kind of money to throw around since at least 2007/08, or even the 90's. Replacing mostly idle $2500-$3000 machines every 3 years.... Hopefully this isn't a public institution.


Public institution but private grants for workforce training. Austin-area colleges are doing pretty well.
 

wallysb01

macrumors 68000
Jun 30, 2011
1,589
809
Public institution but private grants for workforce training. Austin-area colleges are doing pretty well.

Well that's definately not the norm in science/engineering across public schools.

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I still don't think so... Not many Mac Pros are going to specialty industries like yours.

I'd agree that maybe a lot of those people don't need Mac Pros. But if you want a machine with one or more external displays with a nice GPU, you don't have many choices from Apple these days.

There must be data somewhere on OSX updates, or similar, that could track this right?
 

handsome pete

macrumors 68000
Aug 15, 2008
1,725
259
Yep, I teach college motion graphics classes and there are labs full of stock MacPros. I've been to a couple other universities in town and same deal there. Mostly just RAM upgrades. All the drive bays and PCI slots are wasted there and they buy new ones every 3 years.

I can't attest for other area universities, but the one I teach at has mostly gone the iMac route for the lower level course labs along with the older Mac Pros (can't say for sure if they've ever been upgraded). But for the advanced classes and graduate labs they've gone with Boxx machines and a substantial render farm.


It just seems to me that those of us who prefer the all-in-one don't get anything out of the modular (via TB) approach except a higher price tag. The rest never really needed a Mac pro in the first place and were always looking for that missing product between iMac and MacPro.
 

GermanyChris

macrumors 601
Jul 3, 2011
4,185
5
Here
It depends upon what it means for xMac. The "I don't like iMac so give me xMac" then no. Apple has little desire to just shuffle the deck chairs in the desktop market. Swap large blocks of iMac users for large blocks of xMac users. ( yeah there are folks who aren't in the intersection but the intersection is much larger than any one of those two subsets. )

I don't think it is $900-1,600 xMac as much as the 1,899-2,499 segment they have gradually given up as traded that range subset with the iMac. They did sell a "box with slots" into that range before during the last 12 years. The name "Power Mac" and "Mac Pro" was used in that space before. They may need a new name (or possibly old name + new suffix ) to cover just that range subset. if "x" stands for doesn't have a name yet, then it is a fit.


The open question how do they go back in and readjust allocating that range with the iMac folks. Given the whole range to the iMac was bad idea long term for both iMac and Mac Pro. (The Mac Pro has had and is having problems , but the iMac is only a couple of years away from running into the same buzzsaw of overall industry trends in that same price range. )

The tower desktop market is quite soft, and getting softer there is nothing that Apple can/will do to change that fact. The home user no longer needs a "hub" to connect their devices to. If the home user needs some storage they go buy a buffalo drop their life on it and let their smart TV access it. The tower desk top has really been relegated to gamers, pro's, and stick in the muds like myself who don't know any better.
 

wallysb01

macrumors 68000
Jun 30, 2011
1,589
809
I can't attest for other area universities, but the one I teach at has mostly gone the iMac route for the lower level course labs along with the older Mac Pros (can't say for sure if they've ever been upgraded). But for the advanced classes and graduate labs they've gone with Boxx machines and a substantial render farm.

That's similar to what I've seen. Students use the university cluster on PCs, maybe iMacs, or their personal computers.

It just seems to me that those of us who prefer the all-in-one don't get anything out of the modular (via TB) approach except a higher price tag. The rest never really needed a Mac pro in the first place and were always looking for that missing product between iMac and MacPro.

I think this is pretty accurate. You serve the people that where in the gap well, and you hit the low level Mac Pro users (those opting for the base model or close to it). Those that need the dual processor version, even the top single processor model, and high end GPUs are going to have to make compromises. Especially if we see something that needs the E3s because of TDP limits that won't allow for the E5-1600s. There is really no price reason to leave the E5-1620/50 for something like the E3-1245/80, the only reason Apple would do that is for TB and form factor. But you give up ECC RAM, over 300GB in max RAM capabilities (yes, I know the OSX issues, but those can be easily fixed if Apple actually cared), and an additional 2 cores for the 1650. So for those that really do want to make some sort of mini cluster out of this product, pricing goes through the roof for the same capabilities already possible in dual processor workstations.
 

sjinsjca

macrumors 68020
Oct 30, 2008
2,238
555
My own guess is that the Mac Pro will be a new especially hairy-chested member of the Mac Mini family. Probably double-wide in a pizza-box format.

Big honking processor, lots of RAM (probably soldered for reliability), fast SSD, great GPU. And Thunderbolt for everything else including a PCIe crate and/or drive bays.

There are many good things about this. Thunderbolt is basically PCIe-on-a-wire (or fiber). So this approach lets the costs of expandability be borne by those who want it at the time they need it while allowing essentially unlimited expandability.

In one fell swoop Apple will have replaced both the pro and the XServe with something far superior to both.

There will be a lot of whining (it's starting already) but it will be awesome.
 

deconstruct60

macrumors G5
Mar 10, 2009
12,302
3,894
There is really no price reason to leave the E5-1620/50 for something like the E3-1245/80, the only reason Apple would do that is for TB and form factor.

There is a pretty big gap price wise. Two "Good" , "Better" , "Best" line ups core foundations ( v2 and v1 pricing but the v3 and v2 pricing coming up should be similar):

E3's ( Pulling iGPU xxx5 models to ease TB impelement. Is suspect v3 are bumped up on GHz. )

E3 1225 v2 3.2 GHz 4 cores $209
E3 1245 v2 3.4 GHz 4 cores $266
E3 1275 v2 3.5 Ghz 4 cores $339

http://www.cpu-world.com/news_2012/2012020701_Prices_of_Xeon_E3-1200_v2_CPUs.html

They probably need to do more differentiate on different PCI-e cards to separate these out more. (just like on the iMac line up only with desktop cards to push the overall system into higher range. )

E5 ( again three to )

E5 1620 v1 3.6 GHz 4 cores $294
E5 1650 v1 3.2 GHz 6 cores $583
E5 1660 v1 3.3 Ghz 6 cores $1080
http://www.cpu-world.com/news_2012/2012020701_Prices_of_Xeon_E3-1200_v2_CPUs.html


The 1620 almost starts off where the E3 1275 ends. Trying to limbo back down to the $2,000 border would definitely be possible making that as the foundation swap. Especially with the task of trying to bring the top end of the line up back under the $2,600 mark.


But you give up ECC RAM,

Xeon E3 has this. (somewhat similar to how the Core i 49xx has it switched off from the basic Xeon E5 architecture so to be a Core i offering).

over 300GB in max RAM capabilities

Pragmatically an evolutionary Mac Pro with one bank of RAM won't hit that. It isn't an OS X limitation and OS X's limitation is already busted by current Mac Pro let alone the E5 series (v1 or v2).

But a 32GB cap is going to snare a few. (but apple gets to put off upgrading OS X for another couple iterations )



and an additional 2 cores for the 1650.

Probably additional cores in two slots in the line up. I think more folks will not be happy with the GHz tradeoffs. The E5 1620 is what alot of "legacy software, single threaded" folks have been looking for and had to push to the top end of the single package Mac Pro line up to get when really only have entry level money ( hence the moaning and groaning.)

So for those that really do want to make some sort of mini cluster out of this product, pricing goes through the roof for the same capabilities already possible in dual processor workstations.

If want to do a mini cluster then Mac Minis are already there. If all doing is x86 core count chasing then just start racking minis. Especially if can swing quad minis through the whole line up on this next v3 (Haswell) update.

If it is a cluster of GPU core counts than doesn't work well, but x86 only really needs to be about $800/node not $2,000/node cost if trying to stick to a limited budget. If Apple can squeeze quads as the default into the mini then it just takes 5 to get to a count of 20 ---> $4,000. Which is much lower than any two 10 core count offering is going to be. That will be about
$2,200+ just for the two CPU packages themselves before Apple mark up and rest of larger infrastructure costs are added in.

But yes a very high speed interconnect is not there ( if need to ship intermediate results off the different nodes in the cluster). And the mega expensive per node software packages don't scale. Neither one of those I don't think Apple looses much sleep over missing out on.

I don't think Apple is trying to say "stack up boxes" to get back to dual Mac Pro at all. That's more of the ultimate modular speculations that any real insightful read on Apple's direction. Either they will ship a dual to participate or drop out of that sub-market. One of the two.
 
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goMac

Contributor
Apr 15, 2004
7,662
1,694
The exact post being talked about:

For what it's worth - a couple of months ago I received a call from Douglas Brooks, Apples project manager for the new Mac Pro to address my concerns about the new machine. Obviously he didn't tell me anything about the new MP, but asked me what I wanted to see. I told him expandability for extra graphics cards support, and memory expansion were at the top of my list amongst other things. His reply was simple:

"You are going to be really glad that you waited [to buy a new tower]. We are doing something really different here and I think you're going to be very excited when you see what we've been up to. I can't wait to show this off".

That conversation gave me enough confidence to wait for the new machine. I'm looking forward to the announcement. Hopefully the wait will be worth it.

So RAM expandability is likely. So is GPU expandability.

Because this was a few months ago, it leaves the door open for WWDC and a Xeon E3 swap.
 

JM-Prod

Suspended
Apr 10, 2011
145
51
Redrocket can be delivered via Thunderbolt.

Why would I want to do that, I already have enough clutter on my desk. And the SDI-cards, even more Thunderbolts? The GPU expansion chassis? Blu-ray burner? We already have enough clutters on our desks in this industry, grading monitors, control panels, etc... Why would anyone believe that spreading parts around like a wild medusa is a good thing, when you can have everything in a box? Is that not the point of a workstation?

Again, if the rumors are true: **** apple! ...and their horrible consumer culture made possible in slave camps. **** them. Is it just a ****** corporation like the other ****** corporations? Well, they decide. Our industries saved this company. Jobs loved content developers. **** Apple if they **** us over once more.

Samsung, Linux, HP and Micro**** are waiting.
 
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-hh

macrumors 68030
Jul 17, 2001
2,550
336
NJ Highlands, Earth
They're fixing problems that exist on Apple's end.

And one part of this is the cost of manufacturing & stocking 3-4 variants (single - dual CPU, etc)

I'd bet 80% of Mac Pro users never install another drive, and that 95% never install drives into bays 3 and 4. I'd also bet 95% of users never install an additional PCI-E card.

As has already been debated, I think it varies to the extremes. The notional "College Cluster" of stock Mac Pro is probably going to get superceded by a room full of iMacs on its next upgrade cycle, which takes it out of play. For professionals who actually workload their hardware, I'd say that probably "95%" have contemplated their contingencies for when they expect to hit headroom limits. As a matter of lifecycle example, I can recall that between the time I bought my G5 PowerMac and by the time that it was retired, its internal storage capability inceased by more than tenfold.


I...
Especially if you're a business that has network storage, you're not investing in more drive's for your employees Mac Pros. It's safer to have data in your local cloud with backups and faster access speeds than it is to have it sitting on your drive.

Having a local machine full of drives locally is probably going to be an antiquated way of doing things long term, especially with laptops becoming more popular.

Yes, local drives are going to continue to be under pressure from network/cloud storage alternatives, but the Network's I/O performance also needs to be there to make it viable. The Mac Pro (and state of the shelf) is still Gigabit Ethernet (vs 10GbE), which is slower than even the antiquated SATA-1 hard drive interface that's been in the Mac Pro since it was a G5 PPC.


My guess is Apple has that data. Steam might too, but I doubt you could drill down like that on their site.

Apple definitely has the data, because every time in OS X that an App crashes and you authorize sendingin their automated bug report, the data sent includes hardware info. The question is if Apple bothers to data-mine the info they already have. To do so looks to be a very trivial task IMO.



-hh
 

deconstruct60

macrumors G5
Mar 10, 2009
12,302
3,894
Yep, seems like a bit of verification of this thread.

Not really. They seem to run somewhat opposed to one another. Unless "extra graphics cards" means capping out at 2 (which could be since that pragmatically the cap now and two being inserted by default) then dual GPUs doesn't really match up once take Thunderbolt's requirements into account. [ still don't think going to get two standard PCI-e cards if Thunderbolt is primary part of the equation ]

Large memory upgrades and the timing does seem to knock out the E3 though if large means over 32. However, muddled use of "expansion" if talking about swapping 4 2GB DIMMs for 4 8GB DIMMs. It is exactly the same number of DIMMs and hasn't really expanded at all. An standard config E3 would probably ship with 2 DIMMs and 4 slots. Technically that can be expanded. Just saying expanded without a size context doesn't really move and E3 in or out of the picture.

Also, this probably means no Mac Pro at WWDC. Apple wouldn't do damage control if it's less than a week away.

Yeah appears as managed leak qued up manage exceptions. And yet the conversation was placed months ago. If look closely nothing really waves off WWDC unless latch onto E5 has having to be the foundation.



That does probably mean Apple is sticking with the Xeon E5.

Only if shifting away from WWDC. If they are then also only slightly less probable they are sticking with one box to service both single and dual CPU package setups.
 

deconstruct60

macrumors G5
Mar 10, 2009
12,302
3,894
Why would I want to do that,

A single individual doesn't comprise a market.

I already have enough clutter on my desk.

If looked at linked the context is usage coupled to a laptop. There is no desk concept where it is already requested and deployed. Incrementally, adding other uncluttered desks is entirely possible.




And the SDI-cards, even more Thunderbolts? The GPU expansion chassis? Blu-ray burner? We already have enough clutters on our desks in this industry, grading monitors, control panels, etc... Why would anyone believe that spreading parts around like a wild medusa is a good thing, when you can have everything in a box? Is that not the point of a workstation?

Even in the current state the Mac Pro never did go after "have it all in one box" like the HP z820 and Dell 7600 do. Can even trace back to the ancient "can't survive without the 6 PCI slots in Power Mac 9600 " threads. Apple dropped down to 4 slots and the sky didn't fall.






Our industries saved this company.

Narcissistic hand waving didn't save the company. Apple stop doing some stupid things. They canceled a completely muddled product line up. They exited some markets altogether (Newton ). Microsoft loaned the a ton of cash to limp by on. Frankly the first major move they made was iMac. Which was the correct one since Mac OS X market needed to be large enough to be a viable target for software developers. A broad spectrum of users buying Macs saved Apple; not some privileged 1% .



Jobs loved content developers.

That is fundamentally different that wedded to a specific hardware deployment. Jobs directly supervised the transition down to 4 PCI slots. Complete spin doctoring that Jobs was a mega lover of max slots and biggest to do everything boxes.

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The notional "College Cluster" of stock Mac Pro is probably going to get superceded by a room full of iMacs on its next upgrade cycle, which takes it out of play. ....

Can keep retreating into a smaller, more skewed subset that fits but then detach from the larger issue of whether there is a viable market anymore. Toss all of these folks overboard and the pressing question is there enough people left to sell Mac Pros to.

Instead of measuring what is there, it is act to measure what want to find.

As a matter of lifecycle example, I can recall that between the time I bought my G5 PowerMac and by the time that it was retired, its internal storage capability inceased by more than tenfold.

It couldn't possibly be actually expanding the number of drives over that lifecycle. That significant amount of that is technically not expansion but upgrades of the same fixed number of drives. Those are two different things.
 

clamnectar

macrumors regular
May 7, 2009
178
0
Thanks for the very informative post. I brought up the "leaked" SKUs from 9to5mac.com hoping we could make some sense of them. I was surprised that no rumor site had investigated them yet. I really hope that the SKUs you pointed out belong to Mac Pros, but I also know the Fall is the safer bet with the arrival of the new xeons.

What I didn't consider is that time capsule and airport extreme etc. all have SKUs too. Turns out they are also in line for MEXXX generation updates. So you know what.... it's probably those :( :(

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The exact post being talked about:



So RAM expandability is likely. So is GPU expandability.

Because this was a few months ago, it leaves the door open for WWDC and a Xeon E3 swap.

You can't have dual E3s though. Isn't that dealbreaker? 4 cores max
 

JM-Prod

Suspended
Apr 10, 2011
145
51

brainburst

macrumors newbie
Jun 5, 2013
1
0
My own guess is that the Mac Pro will be a new especially hairy-chested member of the Mac Mini family. Probably double-wide in a pizza-box format.

Big honking processor, lots of RAM (probably soldered for reliability), fast SSD, great GPU. And Thunderbolt for everything else including a PCIe crate and/or drive bays.

There are many good things about this. Thunderbolt is basically PCIe-on-a-wire (or fiber). So this approach lets the costs of expandability be borne by those who want it at the time they need it while allowing essentially unlimited expandability.

In one fell swoop Apple will have replaced both the pro and the XServe with something far superior to both.

There will be a lot of whining (it's starting already) but it will be awesome.

THUNDERBOLT SUCKS!!!! it's only the equivalent of a SINGLE pcie x 4 slot!!
It can handle one or two peripherals at a time well that's it!!!
Thunderbolt 2 isn't much better.

----------

"In numerous thread you and other xMac fans have clamoured that all you need is a headless iMac. Along comes what is largely a headless iMac and all of sudden it is bad."

It's only bad as a Mac Pro, not as a headless iMac! 2 separate needs
 

JM-Prod

Suspended
Apr 10, 2011
145
51
Just a note: People seem to forget that this is also about OSX as a viable platform. Supported hardware at both and all ends of the spectrum is important to keep OSX and the Mac a full alternative to Windows. The delay of a new MacPro has already made the Mac platform vulnerable.
 

Headtalk

macrumors newbie
Nov 3, 2012
14
0
RIP Computer Workstations

What do Computer Workstations makers have in common?

NeXT
SGI
SPARC
RIP Mac Pro
20060614195919!NeXTstation.jpg


Disposable computing is upon us ....

-G
 
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arogge

macrumors 65816
Feb 15, 2002
1,065
33
Tatooine
A lack of internal expansion room is a non-starter. How would you run an external storage array that requires an adapter card? How would you install SAS disks? Graphics cards? Audio/Video capture cards? Not everything can be done with a one-button approach to market compatibility. The only way that would work is if Apple intends to deliver some sort of server platform to compliment a desktop system.
 
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