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flowrider

macrumors 604
Nov 23, 2012
7,235
2,964
I would LOVE to have one. No clue what I would do with it but it's just so cute.

You really wouldn't! They were a bxxch to work on. I consulted in those days, and was unfortunate enough to break a client's CRT. Of course I replaced it under my nickel, but you needed to be very careful when inside one.

Lou
 

deconstruct60

macrumors G5
Mar 10, 2009
12,309
3,900
...

They also wouldn't put in a Crossfire bridge into the nMP unless it served Apple somehow.

Same apparent bucket as the Fire Pro drivers added to the Boot Camp for Windows tool kit. Oddly it is playing into notion that a significant subset of the customer base is booted up into Windows a significant enough amount of the time. Probably partially motivated by some workstation "pro" apps just aren't going to get ported. Either being running VM or if need more graphics throughput via boot camp. The other subset being folks more so "one man band" customers who work during the day in OS X on apps and then reboot into Windows to play games in their spare time. Folks consumed with spec/benchmark porn will pay for Crossfire.... it is just better porn even if it doesn't work sometimes.

As AMD is moving toward doing Crossfire over the main PCIe bus doesn't really make much long term sense to add complexity to the connector.

Dual, non heterogenous GPU support would make sense though. In the Mac product line up almost all of the systems have an integrated GPU. If there is a second GPU inside the system it is probably not from the same vendor ( as Intel doesn't sell any at this time and AMD is not likely getting a CPU core design win in the immediate future. ). So dual yes? Dual homogenous with a proprietary connector? Not so much.
 

deconstruct60

macrumors G5
Mar 10, 2009
12,309
3,900
Dudes... how's this different from every other MP update cycle? It always takes Apple forever to upgrade it,

2006 Intel updates .... Mac Pro initial version
2007 Intel bump ... Mac pro bump. ( Intel may have been doing most of work here so perhaps outside the norm but... )
2008 Intel upgrade .... Mac Pro upgrade
2009 Intel upgrade ... Mac Pro upgrade
2010 Intel upgrade ... Mac Pro upgrade ( 3-4 late but well inside the same calendar year and barely more than a single Quarter difference)
....... 2011 dark for both...

2012 Intel major upgrade ... Mac Pro speed bump ( no new board , no new processor, install stuff appeared late 2010 in Intel's catalog)
2013 Intel upgrade ... Mac Pro upgrade. ( release extended apparently as much to get to TB v2 as new Intel CPU stuff).
2014 Intel upgrade ... Mac Pro radio silence. No even 2012 like speed bump on just one component.
2015 Intel (probably nothing) ... Mac Pro (given previous year's silence ... rise repeat. )

Apple has gone to skipping things. They skipped Xeon E5 v1. They have extremely likely skipped Xeon E5 v3. A new plan perhaps ( only like even versions now), but it is different. Drifting the even numbers actually makes it harder to do 12-16 month upgrades because completely out of since with Intel's tick/tock schedule and core I/O chipset schedule for the Xeon E5 + 6xx chipsets life-cycles. Whatever Apple is doing, it is not in synch with what Intel is primarily doing with the workstation components.

I doubt they expect to make much money on it (if any)

Apple expects to make money off of everything they sell for money.

, I also really doubt they're gonna kill it after going through the effort of releasing a redesign and getting production rolling in the US.

That production is a contract manufacturer. They can be fired at the the end of any run. Apple turned that Sapphire glass disaster into a data center, but they dumped the contract manufacturer under the bus and moved on relatively easily.

The design of the 2013 .... Apple probably has made the money back on that cost outlay. Especially goosing sales over 2 years span. If they sold enough units in numbers that are interesting enough to them ( some validation that they are hitting a targeted market) then they'll continue. However, the notion that Apple "has to keep going" is mostly wishful thinking. Writing off something that didn't work of this scale is just lower tax payments for them. (If Beats doesn't pan out that will be much harder to sweep under the rug.) Similarly, Apple doesn't have to panic if it looks like it will take another year to make the correct refinements to do a better "version 2".
 

wallysb01

macrumors 68000
Jun 30, 2011
1,589
809
Let's say I have a choice between getting a PC or Mac workstation, and I determine the best hardwarespecs for my usage would be:
Xeon E3-1271 v3 (quad 3.5-4GHz); single Quadro K2200 GPU; 16GB RAM; 500GB SSD

This is pragmatically far more a desire for a different product than a different configuration. Built in here is a presumption that there is a general box that stuff different motherboards into to crank out a number of product variations with lower container changes.

Not exactly. Sure the E3 requires a new board and all that, but the E3-1271 and the E5-1620 are fairly interchangeable from a user stand point. The only real difference as it relates to the Mac Pro and general workstation usage is the GPU situation. The point the guy is making is that if you want a relatively basic workstation Apple forces you into an expensive configuration: Duel GPUs, PCI-e storage, no additional cheap internal storage options. That’s his point. This isn’t about an xMac, specifically (though that would alleviate the problem to a degree). Rather, its about the lack of choice and resulting price tag.

I can configure this system he wants in a Z440 with a E5-1620 rather than the E3-1271, the 512 GB PCIe-FLASH, and minus the RAM, for $2,152 with the ever-present coupon code from HP. The nMP with the 512 GB PCIe-FLASH is $3069. I could even save another few hundred on the Z440 if I bought my own SSD, getting it down to about $1950 (that’s including a $300 allowance for the SSD, which might be $100 too much).

Sure working from the nMP to the comparable Z workstation is fairly even. But if you live outside the exact needs the nMP is suited for, its very easy to configure a different workstation that works for you for much, much less.

Apple is even more a systems ( hardware + software ) company than there were. Their major value add is integrating all the "stuff". They aren't a contract design firm; "you pick the parts and we'll build it". Nor are they a "bare bones" vendor; sell me a starter kit and I'll add the rest with my trusty screwdriver. If Apple advertised themselves as being a contract firm then there would be a frustration disconnect. They don't. More than a few folks here spend time wishing Apple was a different company then they have been and are even more so now.

You have a point here. If you need OS X, you need OS X and that’s that. When it comes to doing professional work, $1000 or so isn’t a whole lot more to pay if it really makes your life easier or is just absolutely necessary. But its also enough to get you to think a little harder about how much you really “need” OS X...
 
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pat500000

Suspended
Original poster
Jun 3, 2015
8,523
7,515
updated nMP will be out by the end of December, it will have thunderbolt 3 and updated GPU. Apple did not build an entire US manufacturing center just to scrap it after one release. Apple betted on GPU compute. Pro apps have said their upcoming releases will support Metal (Autodesk, Foundry, others). Intel finally gave external GPUs their blessing with Thunderbolt 3. the nMP is Apple's GPU compute system for design/video/audio/medical. All areas where they still have a strong presence. with the nMP they are on a slower 2 year cycle.

I know a lot of boutique studios using them in production and freelancers who love them as WAY easier to take along as kits than the old systems. I have also started seeing our video assist carts switch over. It is still a heck of a lot easier to dangle a bunch of video gear off a nMP than Apple's other systems. They are very popular at commercial facilities as well.

While we have switched some of our art department systems over to iMacs our digital department could not do it even if we wanted to. Working on multiple 4-8k plates in Nuke, or working in Maya and Modo would be painful, let alone trying to use Mari. I expect most of the line to get updated late October then the nMP by end of December.

We actually switched back to using FCPX for some of our work. We still do film projects in either Avid or Lightworks, but for VR we use FCPX. We are doing realtime 6K multi-stream with FCPX that no other editor could touch. We were actually surprised when we were evaluating NLEs (Premiere was originally a top pick since we used that for the Fast 7 ride at Universal) nothing else could match it for speed and Apple had addressed all of our gripes that made us abandon it after FCP7.

Going back to the other posters comment on Shake (I actually know some of the Pro Apps team from Santa Monica). Apple never bought it to keep Shake alive. Shake's code base was already dated when they took it over. Apple wanted the Chalice optical flow tech (Which is still the best and still in FCPX and Motion) and they wanted to gut what they could for Motion and FCPX. Yes Ron Brinkmann took the team over to The Foundry and made Nuke the go to compositing app for VFX. But just so you know Apple still licenses Shake after all these years. Large facilities license the code from Apple so it isn't 100% gone, although it should be. Shake was really really weak at 2.5D and 3D compositing compared to Nuke, even back when DD Software was selling it.
I admit..i was like...WHOA...but then you brought this point up...that's true. Why build US manufacturing for one use..
 

neomorpheus

macrumors regular
Dec 17, 2014
204
103
Least you forget that Apple did try to license out their operating system to third party manufactures. That undercut their own brand, a mistake that Apple does not want to repeat.

And when that happened, Apple's only income was generated by Macs.

Today's income is generated by Ios and iTunes store.

Regarding IBM, i can't believe that so many here are so deep into apple's behind that they didnt know that IBM was a gigantic hardware company and that they sold their desktop, laptop and server business to Lenovo.

Others here still swear that their beloved and magical Macs dont use the same components are regular PC's.

No, people, they are not sprinkled with magic water, fermented on Job's corpse, so get over it.

Also, people seems to forget that the planet population is almost 8 billions and maybe half of those dont have a personal computer, so the opportunity is there.

the problem is, to reach those people, apple either cut prices (which will never happen) or sell you a cheap copy of OSX for your own hardware.

Lastly, for the naysayers, if OSX runs so well now on hackintoshes, without apple's blessings, imagine how great it would be if they approved it.

I know, i know, the blind fanatics would never accept osx on a non aluminum case not produced by apple.
 

merlinmage

macrumors member
Mar 23, 2014
81
67
Just move on like the others and go the Windows route. My nMP is now a ProRes only Encoder, while my Windows WS runs the rest. It's just the way things work now.
 
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ixxx69

macrumors 65816
Jul 31, 2009
1,294
878
United States
Regarding IBM, i can't believe that so many here are so deep into apple's behind that they didnt know that IBM was a gigantic hardware company and that they sold their desktop, laptop and server business to Lenovo.

Others here still swear that their beloved and magical Macs dont use the same components are regular PC's.

No, people, they are not sprinkled with magic water, fermented on Job's corpse, so get over it...

I know, i know, the blind fanatics would never accept osx on a non aluminum case not produced by apple.
Not that I disagree with a lot of that, but why are you so angry and insulting about it?

I chuckled too at the irony that there are Apple geeks here who don't know that IBM essentially invented the "office" PC that many thought would put Apple out of business, and that Apple fanboys back then equated IBM with the evil empire.

However, I also know that the vast majority of forum users are twenty-somethings and teenagers, and really even anyone under the age of 35 or so might not have been old enough to remember those days when a PC = IBM (Times magazine put the IBM PC on the cover of it's 1982 "Man of the Year" edition... and that was a big deal back then). IBM may have sold off it's PC business only a little while ago, but really after the '80's, IBM itself was a non-factor, especially amongst non-corporate users. Also, lots of forum users here from places other than the US.

I really encourage anyone who's geek enough to hang out here but doesn't know their IBM PC history, read up on it - it's really an amazing story on so many levels, starting with the opening line about how the PC as we know it almost didn't happen, and just for good measure, how Microsoft might have been relegated to a long list of long forgotten software developers without it.
 

neomorpheus

macrumors regular
Dec 17, 2014
204
103
Not that I disagree with a lot of that, but why are you so angry and insulting about it?

I chuckled too at the irony that there are Apple geeks here who don't know that IBM essentially invented the "office" PC that many thought would put Apple out of business, and that Apple fanboys back then equated IBM with the evil empire.

However, I also know that the vast majority of forum users are twenty-somethings and teenagers, and really even anyone under the age of 35 or so might not have been old enough to remember those days when a PC = IBM (Times magazine put the IBM PC on the cover of it's 1982 "Man of the Year" edition... and that was a big deal back then). IBM may have sold off it's PC business only a little while ago, but really after the '80's, IBM itself was a non-factor, especially amongst non-corporate users. Also, lots of forum users here from places other than the US.

I really encourage anyone who's geek enough to hang out here but doesn't know their IBM PC history, read up on it - it's really an amazing story on so many levels, starting with the opening line about how the PC as we know it almost didn't happen, and just for good measure, how Microsoft might have been relegated to a long list of long forgotten software developers without it.

You are right, I shouldn't be this angry at certain people's posts.

It is just that so many apple fans really believe that apple's devices are really magical and use components made exclusively for them.

They dont do research, they dont bother in looking for alternatives when apple dont provide a product they need.

For example, I provide Mac support for a multi billion company and the "creative" dept just upgraded from cMP 3.1 and 4.1 to "new" nMP and the amount of hardware lost due to the lack of PCI slots is staggering, just because the "artists" would prefer to leave the company before accepting being moved to windows workstations. Several RAID and SAS cards were abandoned because of this and they are actually good working parts that could be migrated to a windows or linux workstation.

Macs, iphones, windows, etc, are tools, not divine items and you should adapt to what is out there.

More and more, apple seems to be moving away from the pro market, so what we should do is pay them with the same coin and indeed move somewhere else, where they are willing to provide us with those tools and proper equipment, instead of making excuses and moving to non serviceable nor expandable iMacs and mac minis.
 

zephonic

macrumors 65816
Feb 7, 2011
1,310
709
greater L.A. area
For example, I provide Mac support for a multi billion company and the "creative" dept just upgraded from cMP 3.1 and 4.1 to "new" nMP and the amount of hardware lost due to the lack of PCI slots is staggering, just because the "artists" would prefer to leave the company before accepting being moved to windows workstations. Several RAID and SAS cards were abandoned because of this and they are actually good working parts that could be migrated to a windows or linux workstation.

Couldn't those cards work in a ThB enclosure? Or too expensive?

While I understand your point about discarding perfectly functional hardware, reality is we do it all the time. Anybody still on Ultra-SCSI here? NuBus? AGP?

Btw, putting the word artists between quotation marks comes across as derisive.
 
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Larry-K

macrumors 68000
Jun 28, 2011
1,888
2,340
Btw, putting the word artists between quotation marks comes across as derisive.
I think that's the point, as well as "creative".

Anyone who has dealt with a "multi billion company" probably feels the same way.
 
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Mactrunk

macrumors regular
May 12, 2005
177
59
I'm an Apple fan... only because I've been using them from the first "128k".
Lately I'm bummed that they have abandoned the pro/desktop market.
The flagship 2013 was a major disappointment for me.
I'm on a 2010 that is working fine, but sure wish they had continued to develop the big box Mac Pro.
Converting to Windows would be too many months for me.
Are Hackintoshes really up to snuff for rock solid everyday professional platforms?
I'll probably have to do something in the next year or so.
 
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poematik13

macrumors 65816
Jun 5, 2014
1,223
1,414
the majority of creatives in film, photo, fashion, design, etc are still on mac and aren't going anywhere. the nMP is selling very well among boutique post production / creative houses and such. only people that post on forums switch(ed) to windows, and those people aren't necessarily the ones who are employed in the aforementioned creative fields. you're either actually doing work or you're just on here making threads about how mac pro is doomed because it doesn't have whatever flavor of the week outlandish tech spec.
 
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MacDarcy

macrumors 65816
Jul 21, 2011
1,011
819
When I went to Art School in the 90s, Apple was all about the artist. They catered to the prosumer. Now it's all about the iPhone and the average consumer. Nothing wrong with that or with the huge profits that come with appealing to the masses, but Apple shouldn't abandone its original base, the creative professionals. The artists, filmmakers and photographers. I know you can do many creative things on the iMac, but it'd be a sad day and the end of an era if Apple discontinues the Mac Pro desktop. I think it's important for Apple to continue to cater to the pro user and to future pro users out there. To not just exclusively become this huge tech giant for the masses.
 
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theluggage

macrumors 604
Jul 29, 2011
7,508
7,407
just because the "artists" would prefer to leave the company before accepting being moved to windows workstations.

The problem for the old Mac Pro is that not many "artists" have that sort of leverage with their employers and the arguments for buying a big box'o'slots from Apple versus a cheaper big box'o'slots from Dell or HP are getting pretty thin. Once upon a time, Macs really were better than PCs in fundamental, technical ways, and the best creative software was Mac-only. Those days are long gibe. These days, its more a matter of preference, there's possibly a better range of software for PC and, if you spend all your working day neck-deep in Avid or Photoshop it doesn't make much difference whether the underlying OS is OSX, son-of-Unix or Windows daughter-of-VMS.

Anybody can make a cheap PC workstation by throwing together whatever the best-value components are this month - safe in the knowledge that the individual component manufacturers have sorted out the Windows drivers - and, frankly, they're not having an easy time of it at the moment. Apple can't compete with that: they could have gone on selling the cMP to a steadily eroding market for a few more years, but the writing was on the wall.

The nMP, like it or loath it, was an attempt to produce a new class of machine that might find a new niche in a changing world. The underlying principle of a big box'o'slots was that any storage or other device needed to be inside the box because it needed a big, bulky bus no more than a few inches long to connect it to the CPU. That's no longer true - indeed, your storage might be on a network and your render farm might be out in the cloud somewhere. Your specialist digitiser doesn't need to be locked up in one person's workstation - it can be easily moved between workstations or hooked up to a laptop for field use. If every nMP in your workplace is linked to its own 8-bay RAID array, you're probably holding it wrong.

Several RAID and SAS cards were abandoned because of this and they are actually good working parts that could be migrated to a windows or linux workstation.

So, if they belonged to you, you'd put them on eBay.
Of course, in a large company, odds are that they were on a 4-year lease along with the cMPs and/or had come to the end of their support contract or were otherwise valueless 'because accounting practices' (money in a corporate environment doesn't work like your personal finances - the actual cost of hardware is negligible compared to the other costs of doing business).
 

macs4nw

macrumors 601
Not necessarily the end of the road for the Mac Pro, maybe just a new beginning. Just entertain the following hypothesis for one second:

Between the end of 2011, right after Mr. Jobs passed away, and sometime in 2013, Apple redesigned the Mac Pro and built manufacturing facilities in the US. Clearly the mandate for new management was to increase profits, and no one wanted a machine that was upgrade-able for nearly a decade, although they must have missed the fact that for the professional market customization and flexibility are paramount.

The new Mac Pro is by no means a workstation, and there is no way in hell that it can qualify as such. The fact that it has outdated Intel Xeon CPUs at its heart and can use a whooping 64GB of ECC DDR3 doesn't make it a workstation. Lets not forget the wimpy 450 Watt PSU or the horrendous and impossible to upgrade D300, D500 and D700 GPUs (3 year old by now ?!).

So back to my original thought: managements mandate to increase profits. Oh yes, someone miscalculated that these must sell like crazy due to the cool factor and because they are an Apple product. Lets not kid ourselves here, because for professionals it is far more important to have the right tools for the job than to look cool while working.

All in all the new Mac Pro did not bring Apple enough profits to justify further development. Going back to a more conventional design (back to a nice shiny tower) and updating the platform to Haswell-E/Skylake-E and DDR4 would mean at least three things:
  • by doing so they would admit that they screwed up
  • profits would still be small because customers wouldn't pay for overpriced RAM, SSD drives, CPUs, and so on, as most folks would just buy the minimal configuration and perform their own upgrades
  • Apple wouldn't enjoy the huge savings on shipping costs if they would go back to an aluminum tower - and no, I would not buy a Mac Pro in a cheap stretched steel and plastic case (like those crappy PCs)
To wrap things up:

Well, apparently the writing is on the wall: bye-bye Mac Pro. The only possible future that I see for the Mac Pro is one in which Apple will partner with IBM (or another major manufacturer) and that manufacturer will build workstations running OS X, with an Apple EFI present on the motherboard instead of the usual uEFI. Apple will be in charge of the software, while the manufacturer will be in charge of the hardware.

I'd imagine that Apple would only entertain this possibility if they want to maintain a presence in the professional and enterprise markets where high end workstations are needed.

Further down the line I think that Apple wants to slowly turn into a service provider over the next decade or so, while maintaining a strong foothold in the mobile market by keeping their platforms proprietary. By devoting more and more resources to iOS I believe that Apple will at some point completely abandon the Mac and instead they will finally license OS X as a standalone product, or they will partner with certain manufacturers and license it as OEM. Hardware quality has increased dramatically, to the point where a lot of hardware today is far better than what Apple is selling in their Macs. Certainly these won't be cheap clones, and if I'm right about Apple partnering with others, then Apple will most likely want to maintain control over the firmware.

But who knows, I'm just speculating here.

The bottom line:
It's all about profits and the bottom line. Apple will always do what's best for Apple, for their share prices to go up and for their shareholders to make money. Apple doesn't care about enthusiasts, or about how much we love the classic Mac Pro. If they can't hit their target and make their margins, the product will be quietly killed.

It seems like there isn't much nMP stock anywhere, and prices are high for these outdated trashcans. This can only mean one thing: that it's either being manufactured in very low quantities, or that manufacturing may have stopped completely. Either way, at this point, I wouldn't buy one.
An interesting assessment. Not sure if Apple is willing to give up total control of the software/hardware synergy they pride themselves on so conspicuously, but you are right on the money about Apple's evident obsession of late with maximizing profits vis-a-vis putting their loyal customers first.

For 'Think Different' 1980's Apple enthusiasts, a dismal and depressing prospect really.
 
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neomorpheus

macrumors regular
Dec 17, 2014
204
103
Couldn't those cards work in a ThB enclosure? Or too expensive?

While I understand your point about discarding perfectly functional hardware, reality is we do it all the time. Anybody still on Ultra-SCSI here? NuBus? AGP?

Btw, putting the word artists between quotation marks comes across as derisive.

Sorry, but last time I checked, the cMP 4.1 uses PCIe slots, are those already obsolete?
 

mattspace

macrumors 68040
Jun 5, 2013
3,161
2,865
Australia
Macs, iphones, windows, etc, are tools, not divine items and you should adapt to what is out there.

Tech support staff are tools, not divine policy & decision-making enablers, and they should adapt their attitudes to the needs for their users, whatever they may be, to create the work toolset that makes those users most happy, and therefore productive.

Corrected it for you.
 

mattspace

macrumors 68040
Jun 5, 2013
3,161
2,865
Australia
Funny you say that, recently a designer was let go because it disrespected one of us when we couldn't provide his favorite toy in the manner he thought the company was obligated to provide him.

A disrespectful attitude is always a good reason to nerf an employee, unless they're so productive that it's more efficient to tell support to cowboy up and live with it. Like I said, I've worked both sides of it. Tech support don't do what the company does to earn. Designers often do, ergo tech support is called "support" and not "tech management" for a reason.

As for RDF, ha. I think the nMP is a crap design that perfectly demonstrates how a lack of diversity, in this case diversity of wealth, amongst Apple decision makers has distorted their products, and made them worse for some users.

That doesn't change the fact that working in OSX is generally considered more pleasant than in Windows or Linux, and if your designers factor that into their "what does working here get me?" decision, then the nMP is the only option if they need a desktop and can't use an iMac. It's really no different to getting a good ergonomic chair.

Personally I think the iPad Pro will make a lot of that irrelevant, and will do to established pro software of all varieties, what iOS did to people who specialised in designing in Flash.
 
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