3 3349793 Cancelled Original poster Oct 4, 2015 #1 Hi all, excuse me if I sound stupid, but what does the "c" stand for in the MacPro? 😕 Thanks, Alex Reactions: bwillwall
3 3349793 Cancelled Original poster Oct 4, 2015 #3 pastrychef said: Classic Click to expand... Thanks... I thought it meant Custom but that didn't sound right. 🙂
pastrychef said: Classic Click to expand... Thanks... I thought it meant Custom but that didn't sound right. 🙂
maflynn macrumors Broadwell Oct 4, 2015 #5 throAU said: Classic, as in "pre-retina" Click to expand... Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro Reactions: bwillwall, martyjmclean and 3349793
throAU said: Classic, as in "pre-retina" Click to expand... Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro
throAU macrumors G4 Oct 4, 2015 #6 maflynn said: Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro Click to expand... Ahh, my bad. mis-read as in cMBP... But yeah, the C is 'classic' Reactions: 3349793
maflynn said: Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro Click to expand... Ahh, my bad. mis-read as in cMBP... But yeah, the C is 'classic'
davidlv macrumors 68020 Oct 4, 2015 #8 adam9c1 said: Classic as in 2006-20012 models. Click to expand... You guys have it all wrong - the "c" stands for "cheese grater" style Mac Pro.🙂 Reactions: bwillwall and At_Op45
adam9c1 said: Classic as in 2006-20012 models. Click to expand... You guys have it all wrong - the "c" stands for "cheese grater" style Mac Pro.🙂
m4v3r1ck macrumors 68030 Oct 4, 2015 #9 maflynn said: Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro Click to expand... I always presumed c = Current as in opposite of n = New! Cheers
maflynn said: Technically Mac Pros are not retina machines. The term still fits, i.e., cMP is a Classic Mac Pro Click to expand... I always presumed c = Current as in opposite of n = New! Cheers
maflynn macrumors Broadwell Oct 4, 2015 #10 m4v3r1ck said: I always presumed c = Current as in opposite of n = New! Click to expand... Classic for me. 🙂
m4v3r1ck said: I always presumed c = Current as in opposite of n = New! Click to expand... Classic for me. 🙂
m4v3r1ck macrumors 68030 Oct 4, 2015 #11 maflynn said: Classic for me. 🙂 Click to expand... Those stupid dictionaires!
DPUser macrumors 6502a Oct 5, 2015 #12 "Cut" as in "Cheese" Reactions: At_Op45, martyjmclean, Dwood and 2 others