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Apple this week announced that it has discontinued the Mac Pro, with new configurations no longer available and no further models planned.

Mac-Pro-Three-Generations-Feature.jpg

Below, we reflect on nearly two decades of the Mac Pro.

2006 to 2013

In August 2006, Apple introduced the original Mac Pro, which was an Intel-based follow-up to the PowerPC-based Power Mac G5 that debuted a few years earlier.

Mac Pro was the final Mac model to transition from PowerPC to Intel processors.

"Apple has successfully completed the transition to using Intel processors in just seven months—210 days to be exact," said Apple's then-CEO Steve Jobs, in a press release announcing the first Mac Pro. "And what better product to complete it with than the new Mac Pro, the workstation Mac users have been dreaming about."

Classic-Mac-Pro-Feature.jpg

The original Mac Pro was powered by two dual-core Intel Xeon processors, making it up to twice as fast as the Power Mac G5, according to Apple. It could be configured with up to 2TB of storage—the most ever in a Mac at the time—and up to 16GB of RAM. The computer was equipped with an NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT graphics card.

Like the Power Mac G5, the Mac Pro featured an aluminum tower with a perforated front panel, which earned it the nickname "cheese grater Mac Pro." The computer was equipped with a variety of FireWire and USB-A ports, and it had PCI Express expansion slots. In the U.S., the original Mac Pro started at $2,499.

The classic Mac Pro went on to receive faster Intel processors and other spec bumps until 2012.

2013 to 2019

"Can't innovate anymore, my ass," Apple's former marketing chief Phil Schiller infamously joked, when unveiling the redesigned Mac Pro in June 2013.

"The new Mac Pro is our vision for the future of the pro desktop, everything about it has been reimagined and there has never been anything like it," said Schiller, in a press release announcing the second-generation Mac Pro.

2013-mac-pro.jpg

The so-called "trash can" Mac Pro featured a cylindrical design with a polished black aluminum finish and a "unified thermal core." The computer was visually striking, but Apple later admitted that it was thermally constrained, and it had poor upgradeability. Instead of internal slots, Apple pushed expansion via six Thunderbolt 2 ports.

Other specs included up to a 12-core Intel Xeon processor, dual AMD FirePro GPUs, up to 64GB of RAM, and up to a 1TB SSD. In the U.S., pricing started at $2,999.

Overall, Apple prioritized the Mac Pro's compact size, thermal efficiency, and quiet operation, when most pro users simply wanted the most performant and expandable Mac possible. Then, the Mac Pro went years without receiving upgrades, leading some to question whether Apple was still committed to the high-end Mac market.

2013-mac-pro-full.jpg

The criticism ultimately led Apple to make the rare and surprising move of publicly apologizing to Mac users and ensuring that it remained committed to the Mac. Apple also pre-announced that it was working on a "completely rethought" Mac Pro with a modular design, along with what became the iMac Pro and Pro Display XDR.

"I think we designed ourselves into a bit of a thermal corner, if you will," said Apple's software engineering chief Craig Federighi, at the time. "We designed a system with the kind of GPUs that at the time we thought we needed, and that we thought we could well serve with a two GPU architecture. That that was the thermal limit we needed, or the thermal capacity we needed. But workloads didn't materialize to fit that as broadly as we hoped."

So, Apple went back to the drawing board.

2019 to 2023

In December 2019, the third-generation Mac Pro arrived. As promised, it fixed many of the problems that arose with the "trash can" model.

With this Mac Pro, Apple returned to a modular design with an aluminum housing that lifts off for "360-degree access" to the entire system. The computer had a "state-of-the-art thermal architecture" and eight PCI Express expansion slots.

"We designed Mac Pro for users who require a modular system with extreme performance, expansion and configurability," said Schiller, in a press release at the time. "With its powerful Xeon processors, massive memory capacity, groundbreaking GPU architecture, PCIe expansion, Afterburner accelerator card and jaw-dropping design, the new Mac Pro is a monster that will enable pros to do their life's best work."

Mac-Pro-Feature-Teal.jpg

This was the final Intel-based model, with up to a 28-core Xeon processor available alongside up to 1.5TB of RAM and up to an 8TB SSD. It could be configured with AMD's Radeon Pro Vega II Duo, which Apple said was the world's most powerful graphics card at the time. Other specs included four Thunderbolt 3 ports and an Apple Afterburner accelerator card that enabled playback of three streams of 8K ProRes RAW video simultaneously.

In the U.S., pricing started at $5,999, which was much higher than the previous models.

2023 to 2026

In June 2023, the Mac Pro entered the Apple silicon era when it received the M2 Ultra chip.

Mac Pro was the final Mac model to transition from Intel to Apple silicon.

Apple stuck with the same overall design as the previous generation, but the M2 Ultra chip with unified graphics and memory freed up a lot of internal space compared to the Intel model, resulting in a "hollow" appearance. And on the exterior, the Mac Pro gained eight Thunderbolt 4 ports, up from four Thunderbolt 3 ports previously.

Other specs included up to 192GB of unified memory and up to an 8TB SSD. In the U.S., starting pricing rose to a steep $6,999... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: Mac Pro Discontinued: Reflecting on 20 Years of Apple's Desktop Tower
 
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The Mac Pro may be declared dead, but my 3,1 clearly didn’t get the memo.

That’s a 17‑year‑old workstation running the full Claude desktop suite (Cowork included) which is absurd in the best possible way. The irony of Apple killing the Mac Pro line just as one of the original towers proves it can still run cutting‑edge AI tools is... chef’s kiss.

If that’s not a testament to good hardware outlasting its era, I don’t know what is. I’m not sure the Mac Studio is the true successor to the Mac Pro, but I hope it sticks around long enough to earn the same glorious destiny.
 
As a teen, the Mac Pro was always my favorite Mac and I desperately wanted one. My dad got me a used 2009 dual CPU tray 2.26 in 2014 for my birthday. Still one of the best birthdays to date.

Really bummed about what happened between 2013-2018. Wish there could have been more models.

Unfortunately it makes sense. If they won't support graphics cards, or anything user upgradeable, what's really the point of the Mac Pro now? Sad but true.
 
really would have loved to see 2 ultra chips in one, that design idea would have been wild to see, but I doubt anyone would want to pay the price for that. Maybe they'll take a few years off in reintroduce it when the tech is there to do that and if the demand ever exists?
 
RIP. I remember back when I had a real job my treat for myself was a Mac Pro tower ( forget the exact specs but I paid around $8k for it, 2 27-inch cinema displays, and a companion MacBook Air. The day those all arrived on my door step I was smitten.

I used the absolute hell out of that thing. It was such an amazing computer and lasted a good 12 years for me. It probably would still run decent if I replaced the HDD with SSDs in it but sadly it sits in my closet in a box now. The M series is just so good it's hard to justify the price of these kinds of towers to most people anymore.
 
I get that workstations are powerful and thus are expensive. But making your equipment prohibitively more expensive and then non modular (soldered on this or that) seems like a recipe for long term failure
Good riddance. The $499 MacBook Neo ended her.
Yeah it was that and not the $6000 pricetag for non-upgradeable and non modular components
 
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I've always wanted the trashcan, but could never justify the price. The Intel Mac Mini was always more than enough for me. Then the M1 stuff came out. Hindsight, I’m very glad I didn’t buy the trashcan.
 
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Maybe they'll take a few years off in reintroduce it when the tech is there to do that and if the demand ever exists?
I doubt it.


Apple has discontinued the Mac Pro and has removed the machine from its website, reports 9to5Mac. Apple said it does not plan to design a new version of the Mac Pro, and no new model will be coming in the future.
 
The Mac Pro desktops never got off the ground because the pricing was out of reach for well over 90% of consumers. Only people like music/movie studios had the need and the money for them. Apple should have known that kind of price will only get the kind of hitech professionals who hit the jackpot on their RSU/options and don't know what else to do with their money. Normal compensation hitech pros (myself included) will only drool. We don't wanna sell our houses to buy a computer.
 
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