A brief summary of 970/Macbidouille rumors to date.
When?
Macbidouille reported that the PowerPC 970 was "cleared" for production and that production of the new processor started on April 15th 2003 .
Initial reports claimed that Peter Sandon from IBM will be presenting the chip at WWDC - allowing developers to see a prototype 970 machine. Subsequent reports, however, hinted that mass production off 970 PowerMacs has already begun and that full availability of the production 970 PowerMacs would arrive by WWDC (June 23, 2003). Their most recent timeline provides a bit more wiggle room with the 970 PowerMacs pegged for June/July 2003.
Specs?
An early report claimed speeds up to dual 2.3GHz. However, their benchmarks, only demonstrate machines up to Dual 1.8GHz in speed.
The 970 Motherboards themselves are said to be longer and narrower, and will utilize DDR 400, USB 2.0, AGP 8x, as well as Hypertransport.
The Truth?
At this time, it's unclear - while MacBidouille claims almost immediate availability of the 970s at WWDC, other sources are split on the topic. Some expect just a demo to be shown at WWDC... while one unverified source claims "970 machines will be available the next day after Steve Jobs opening WWDC presentation. With a twist."
Time will tell...
When?
Macbidouille reported that the PowerPC 970 was "cleared" for production and that production of the new processor started on April 15th 2003 .
Initial reports claimed that Peter Sandon from IBM will be presenting the chip at WWDC - allowing developers to see a prototype 970 machine. Subsequent reports, however, hinted that mass production off 970 PowerMacs has already begun and that full availability of the production 970 PowerMacs would arrive by WWDC (June 23, 2003). Their most recent timeline provides a bit more wiggle room with the 970 PowerMacs pegged for June/July 2003.
Specs?
An early report claimed speeds up to dual 2.3GHz. However, their benchmarks, only demonstrate machines up to Dual 1.8GHz in speed.
The 970 Motherboards themselves are said to be longer and narrower, and will utilize DDR 400, USB 2.0, AGP 8x, as well as Hypertransport.
The Truth?
At this time, it's unclear - while MacBidouille claims almost immediate availability of the 970s at WWDC, other sources are split on the topic. Some expect just a demo to be shown at WWDC... while one unverified source claims "970 machines will be available the next day after Steve Jobs opening WWDC presentation. With a twist."
Time will tell...