Crosscreek
macrumors 68030
I would say Apples pipeline is constipated. Needs a good flushing from the top down.
And that's an example of why it is getting harder to depend on Apple: they just drop things in favor of something they consider the next big thing. That's a good way to cripple dependabilityApple has thrown OpenCL under the bus - it's time to go full CUDA.
Tim cook is the new Scully
...and assigned as many engineers as possible to make Apple the best CUDA platform around.
Hope you didn't pay more than $75 for it.In response to this news I just ordered a Radeon 7970 for my 2009 cMP... and earlier this week I installed a CalDigit USB 3.1 PCIE card. I'm gonna keep the old beast running awhile longer...
The problem is this: Intel demonstrated eGPU on Light Peak years ago. There's no technical hurdle except the ones Apple has artificially introduced. We can't upgrade our nMPs with faster GPUs! Because Apple decided to take the ball away and go home. And they still haven't said anything official with Sierra and TB3 Macs.Thunderbolt is here to stay. It's even getting faster with Thunderbolt 3.
the 2013 Mac Pro is not upgradeable like the old Mac tower (which I bought used this year to upgrade from a mid-2010 15" MBP for video editing. Can't afford used 2013 MP or thunderbolt devices). But, the GPU's in the nMP is still viable today, I think. There's also two of them. And, with Thunderbolt 2, I think ppl can add Nvidia GPU's in Thunderbolt enclosures for CUDA operations.
Why would you replace your 2013 MP, say, a year from now if you bought it this year when it doesn't slow down because a new GPU is released or a new CPU is released?
Are you like one of those guys who measure stuff congruent to the specs of their computers?
Although, I do agree that if you bought say, a 2013 MP today and then Apple releases a new Mac Pro early next year with faster CPU, GPU and Thunderbolt 3 that you'd be like, I want to get that. But, if you can afford a 2013 MP, you can probably afford a new Mac Pro when it comes out next year, let's say. Or, you can sell your nMP to get the newer one. Let's just say....
There are probably more HP Z8xx in the Gulf states alone than there have been nMPs sold worldwide - probably in Texas alone. There are massive energy corporations here that issue them like candy.Yes, you're guessing. Given the versatility of HP's Z-series (you think an unsupported 128GB of RAM is impressive? The Z840 can officially support 2TB of RAM) I'd be surprised if the nMP outsold the Z-series line (there are several models to fit everyone's needs).
Hope you didn't pay more than $75 for it.
Apple would never put themselves at the mercy of a third party vendor. For Apple, it's open standards, Apple standards, or GTFO.
And if you like CUDA, you have no leg to stand on about complaining about Metal being a proprietary standard. It's just as proprietary as CUDA.
If I were in Tim's shoes, a couple of years ago I would have called a top-level meeting with the agenda "the internet has exploded with complaints that the MP doesn't support Nvidia cards - why?".
...and I would have fired most of the people who bad-mouthed Nvidia
Apple has thrown OpenCL under the bus - it's time to go full CUDA.
[doublepost=1477631411][/doublepost]Sooo... no new MacPro today, only MacBook with last year's Skylake CPU... /QUOTE]
Actually, pragmatically that is largely this year's Skylake CPU. While Intel "announced" iris 540 in 2015. Configs with clean TB v3 and free of other issues didn't appear for other system vendors until 2016. The Iris Pro stuff also was announced and didn't really appear until later.
The equivalents to 540 and up ( Iris Pro) in the generation 7 ( Kaby Lake) line up are not out yet. if they follow the same "soft, slow" roll out as their predecessors, then Apple waiting on those is somewhat suicidal. What Intel has in debugged, volume shipment ready is generation 6 for MBP class CPU packages.
If Apple is thinking of taking the "every single port has to be TB v3 " mentality to the Mac Pro then they have painted themselves into a corner. That's kind of loopy dogma. There were little to now creditable rumblings about a Mac Pro so not sure why folks. Some indications of desktops in roughly the Q1 '17 timeframe.
What was extremely lame was leaving the MBA dangling. Could have done a speed bump to move to Gen 6 also and just kept it simple/affordable with same case and ports.
I think you took that too literally. MS is generating "excitement" in a way that Apple used to but doesn't anymore.
I agree about its pricing, but curious what that even means anymore about pissing off their partners? I would understand it with something like their once nascent (and now essentially dead) phone OS, but really, what are partners going to do if Microsoft pushes the envelope on price?... stop selling Windows computers?
... Dell, HP, etc, are content to sell the same boxes as they always have - they couldn't give a jack about pushing the industry forward.
You'd have to flash it yourself, but I see them going for $60-80 on eBay, Craigslist all the time. Also, the performance delta between 7950 and 7970 wouldn't be worth the hassle in my opinion.Show me where I can get a mac flashed one for that cheap? I'm gonna sell my 7950 to offset the cost. Should hopefully be a wash.
We all feel your pain and are waiting...
If no mention of the Mac Pro on Thursday, I will have to take the plunge and go with an HP Workstation.