Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
68,234
39,037


Since 2020, Apple has been working to eliminate Intel chips by transitioning the entire Mac lineup to Apple silicon chips, and 2023 is expected to be the year when the transition is completed. One of the major Mac lines still using Intel chips is the Mac Pro, but a refreshed model is in the works.

Mac-Pro-Feature-Red.jpg

This guide covers everything that we know about Apple's plans for the updated Mac Pro.

Mac Studio and the Future of the Mac Pro

There were rumors of a smaller version of the Mac Pro in development, but that machine turned out to be the Mac Studio, a separate product line introduced in March 2022. The Mac Studio is a cross between a Mac Pro and a Mac mini, and it features high-powered M1 Max and M1 Ultra chips. The M1 Ultra in the Mac Studio is already faster than the 28W Intel Xeon chip, but Apple still has plans to refresh the Mac Pro.

At the Mac Studio event, Apple made it clear that the smaller desktop machine is not a Mac Pro replacement. Apple senior vice president of Hardware Engineering John Ternus went as far as confirming that there is a Mac Pro coming "another day" to clear up any confusion about the continuance of the Mac Pro product line. A new Mac Pro is expected in 2023.

Design

The Mac Pro is expected to continue to use the same stainless steel frame and aluminum housing with dual-sided logic board and easy access to the interior for adding and removing components. There's been no word on whether the thermal architecture will change, and it will still feature the same three-dimensional interlocking hemispheres for heat dissipation purposes.

There will be no external design changes to the Mac Pro, so while there will be internal updates, the exterior will likely remain largely the same. The main focus will be on the transition away from Intel chips to pro-level Apple silicon chips.

Apple Silicon Chips

The high-end Mac Studio is equipped with an M1 Ultra chip that's essentially two M1 Max chips connected together, and the M1 Ultra features a 20-core CPU and up to 64-core GPU. It outperforms the 28-core Xeon Mac Pro with the highest-end graphics card, and the new Mac Pro is expected to feature a successor to the M1 Ultra that could be based on the M2 chip, the M2 Ultra.

There were initial rumors that Apple would design an even more powerful chip called the M2 Extreme, but Apple has shelved that development. The M2 Ultra will feature up to a 24-core CPU, up to a 76-core GPU, and at least 192GB RAM at a maximum.

An M2 Extreme chip would have featured up to a 48-core CPU and up to a 152-core GPU, but it has been scrapped due to cost and manufacturing complexities.

User Upgrades

The new Apple silicon Mac Pro models will not feature user-upgradeable RAM because memory is tied to the M2 Ultra motherboard, and the same goes for the GPU. Apple's M-series chips do not support external GPUs at the current time, so it is not likely that there will be GPU upgrades available to be added on.

It's looking like Mac Pro users may be limited to SSD upgrades along with media and networking card additions, based on how other Apple silicon chips work, though specifics aren't yet known.

Release Date

The Mac Pro is expected at some point in 2023, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, but the new machine will not be unveiled at the June Worldwide Developers Conference.

Article Link: Apple's Mac Pro Refresh: What We Know So Far
 
Last edited:
I think it would be cool if Apple also sold a server rack mount Mac Pro also. Might as well hit both sides of the marketplace as ARM servers are very much in use. Also be easier to have a rack with several rack mounted AS based Mac Pros to utilize.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RalfTheDog
What we know so far? NOTHING. Good grief. We've got wishes, hopes, rumor and speculation. That's it. We don't know anything.

What's next? You're going to present some random dude's concept render of an AR headset from Apple, and present it as "what Apple's AR headset could look like"? Oh, wait. You've already done that.
 
I just want the price to drop for the Apple Mac Pro Wheels Kit. $699 is too steep just for rolling wheels.

View attachment 1964094
Yes, quite expensive considering these wheels don't support a heavy load. At Apple's spring event in March we need a heckler in the crowd to say "Hey Tim Apple, why are the wheels $700".🤳
 
I'm just expecting a smaller Mac Pro again compared to the 2019 model, one that incorporates something equivalent to four M1 Max Processors, that supports up to 256 GB of RAM.
If it only has 256GB RAM, then it will be a joke compared to the Intel Mac Pro. There has to be plugin off-SoC RAM for this to be a serious Mac Pro.
 
For the Intel-based Mac Pro, Apple could use the Intel Ice Lake SP chips, which are Intel's third-generation Xeon Scalable processors. Signs of these chips were spotted in an Xcode 13 beta prior to the launch of macOS Monterey.

Y'all even bothering to proofread the articles before publishing them anymore...?!? ;^p

I'm just expecting a smaller Mac Pro again compared to the 2019 model, one that incorporates something equivalent to four M1 Max Processors, that supports up to 256 GB of RAM.
  • LPDDR5X RAM
  • Pin-compatible with LPDDR5 RAM
  • 20% less power usage
  • 33% faster
  • 64GB maximum chip density
  • Single M1 Max SoC = 256GB RAM / 500GB/s UMA
  • Dual M1 Max SoCs = 512GB RAM / 1TB/s UMA
  • Quad M1 Max SoCs = 1TB RAM / 2TB/s UMA
Mac Pro in color Space Gray would be nice addition to the line up.

mac pro shorty.jpg
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.