
Also, Is that true the rumor said the new mac pro is coming out soon (september) ? I thought the 2.26 8 core Nehalem was out this year? How come they release the new one so fast within a year?
Moderator: James Steele
A few things about the OP and the article:jweisbin wrote:This seems to bear out what you are saying, although the speed difference they tested is only about 15%:
http://www.macworld.com/article/139507/ ... o2009.html
To my knowledge the single quad core Mac Pro (latest models) only have 4 RAM slots, so 16 GB would be the max for now, unless you can buy 8 GB RAM sticksn2mpujack wrote:I'd go for the single quad-core 2.66 GHz machine - biggest bang for the buck. Add your own aftermarket ram and drives. OWC has some great deals. And the max that will fit in MacPros is 32 gig ram.
No, there have been no Mac Pro releases this year. Last release was March 09. Check out this Buyers' Guide at MacRumors.com for details:rickindies wrote:Also, Is that true the rumor said the new mac pro is coming out soon (september) ? I thought the 2.26 8 core Nehalem was out this year? How come they release the new one so fast within a year?
True, but that's what OWC is selling. See this page: http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/memory/M ... 066-memory" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;jweisbin wrote:To my knowledge the single quad core Mac Pro (latest models) only have 4 RAM slots, so 16 GB would be the max for now, unless you can buy 8 GB RAM sticksn2mpujack wrote:I'd go for the single quad-core 2.66 GHz machine - biggest bang for the buck. Add your own aftermarket ram and drives. OWC has some great deals. And the max that will fit in MacPros is 32 gig ram.
Good to hear this! Good to know that DP takes full advantage of this multicore thing. Can you give any example of single threaded apps? Any music apps/VIs/plug ins? I mean it would be pain in the **s to know that let say omnisphere/spectrasonic only use single or dual core for their machine to run.newrigel wrote:For single threaded apps, the quad is quicker. Your doing orchestral composing... get an 8 core and the fastest and the most ram you can afford because you WILL take advantage of every core with DP.
I guess you're right about, should get as much RAM as I could regardless of which one I get.jloeb wrote:...Regarding RAM: If your work will be sample-based VI-intensive, then you're definitely going to want to get the RAM regardless of which computer you buy. CPU speed isn't really a tradeoff for RAM in this case.
I dont understand why they did this? I mean, even the G5 PPC Dual Core has 8 memory slot on it, and now they reduced it and make it 4 slots?jweisbin wrote:To my knowledge the single quad core Mac Pro (latest models) only have 4 RAM slots, so 16 GB would be the max for now, unless you can buy 8 GB RAM sticksn2mpujack wrote:I'd go for the single quad-core 2.66 GHz machine - biggest bang for the buck. Add your own aftermarket ram and drives. OWC has some great deals. And the max that will fit in MacPros is 32 gig ram.
I didn't mention the iMac for a couple of reasons. First - the OP is looking for a MacPro. Beyond ram you can't expand an iMac - no internal drives, no dsp cards. Another - until Apple solves the yellowing display problem in the 27" iMacs you'd be best served putting your money in other places.mikehalloran wrote:>I dont understand why they did this? I mean, even the G5 PPC Dual Core has 8 memory slot on it, and now they reduced it and make it 4 slots? <
The PCIx G5 dual processors have 8 slots but the PCI DPs have 4 only. All the G5 single cores have 4 and PCI slots. The Mac Pro single processors have 4; dual processors have 8. This is nothing new.
Regarding the biggest bang for the buck: To me, it appears to be the iMac i7. Same quad processor as the Mac Pro Quad plus a 27" monitor for less money than a MP Q by itself. For those of us not using a ton of VIs, that may be the way to go.
Living in the silly con valley as I do, I know a lot of Apple employees. Regarding the hex core, the song that everyone is "not" singing ("I'm not telling you this!") is See you in September... I think it would be too much to hope that the iMac i7 would also get a processor upgrade at that time. In any case, that has become when I will look to dump this ol' creaky heat pump of a G5.
I did not dispense info from on high. I merely stated what I know to be true. There are still iMac 27" units out there being sold with the yellowing problem. Since you seem to be the fountain of 'correct' info - can you provide a cite for the firmware fix for the yellowing?mikehalloran wrote:>until Apple solves the yellowing display problem in the 27" iMacs you'd be best served putting your money in other places.<
Old news. They did that with firmware upgrades back in February. Took them two tries but they appear to have solved it.
True, you can expand the memory only to 16Gig as opposed to 32G for a MP-Q and there are no expansion slots.
It boils down to whether or not you will be using a large amount of VIs. If you are not, the iMac i7 is a better buy. The second hard drive issue can be solved by a $200 external - essential for Time Machine. For a little more, you can get an external that holds multiple drives.
Although you assume that the OP had full command of facts before asking the question, I do not - else why was the question asked in the first place?
You should be careful of dispensing advice as if it's from on high when you don't know all the facts - or even the latest info on current Apple products.