
Telegram Sam
New member
woweee.
My PC broke down, just accessing this website.
My PC broke down, just accessing this website.
Not really...
Everyone is getting into this comedy act!
I was gonna say that. For only an extra $1000 you can get four PCI-e slots!
Am i the only one who thinks it looks like R2D2?
I bet there's enough power in there to make it talk in beeps as well
Part of me thinks it's an elaborate hoax.
Damn though....Even their advertising of this product is sexy!
Ever see the family guy star wars parody? R2D2 tries to play the holo-message but he crashes over a quicktime codec or something..lol.
If you really want to kick up the power game, server class Window machines (2,4,8, etc) CPUs, more memory than you can shake a stick at.
I didn't look into the cpu model nos because I don't really know much about the high end chips, but how would these machines compare with 12 core xeon mac pro?
I know stats for the new machines aren't out yet, but even historically speaking, does the mac pro hold up?
I am not an Apple guy (since the 80's), but Apple has done some interesting things over the years since they control hardware and software (RISC Chips for example). So they structure differently than MS, due to MSs open hardware architecture (main reason for cheap PCs that behave like crap). But, your high end PCs (for CAD modeling for example) stack up easily with any Mac specs (Just saying from a pure hardware alignment). The difference is, Apple makes it rather easy for their applications to run (control hardware, OS and software= ease of use) and maybe their OS is more efficient as Apple rarely brings forward legacy hardware and software .
So, in this case, it is not an equal comparison. Consumer class verses Server Class hardware. Point here is, there is little limit on a MS/PC hardware spec in regards to memory, CPUs, etc. It is just a matter at what level you want to enter at and what is the cost.
But for 99% of us here, I am not sure what 12 cores would provide as I see less CPU issues and more IO issues. A 12 core system would probably have many of the cores idle unless you are using many applications or you could possible assign plug ins to the cores. The software I have doesn't give this kind of flexibility. It just has a setting, use multi-cores and allow for rewire.
I'll preface it with this as I haven't fully researched it: For most of our requirements in this forum, I would say the machine works well. The question really comes to, does one require more horse power because of new requirements. My machine is about 4 years old. I upgraded memory when I went to Win7 64 and it has the AMD 6 core chip. I still have issues, but I look at my CPUs and they sit at around 20-30% usage. So, the issues are in other areas. That is why architecture of the system is as important as just pure hardware. If data isn't being processed and there is a "data jam" then your wamma jamma hardware is sitting around waiting for something to do. So, Hardware, OS, MB board design and application coding all play into it. Apple takes care of a lot of these issues for the end user and they monitor/control all of this. MS control this to a lesser extent and therefore the end user has more to do. Linux doesn't control it at all and therefore, the end user has to do a lot.Fair enough, but I just mean on a basic comparison benchmark stylie, do the mac pros stack up?
This isn't bait or a challenge...I just don't know.![]()
Heh...don't worry about it.