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Comments
Apple have been gradually moving away from "Pro" level hardware for the last decade. 2009 was the last really competitive Mac Pro. They have shown very little serious interest in that market segment since. The trash can deservedly flopped, and the latest Pros are ridiculously priced and are built around the wrong hardware, no Threadripper CPU and no Nvidia GPU.
I think it's unlikely that they will suddenly turn this all around with an ARM-based Mac Pro. They're trying to force the market towards Metal etc... but the value proposition just isn't there. Their Mac Pros are in Silicon Graphics pricing territory, and SG died because of the competition from much cheaper PCs. If you're running a studio with 50 to 100 seats for video editors, compositors, 3D artists or even designers you use PCs.
For sure.
ARMv9 and SVE2 are most likely up and running in Apple’s labs. In 2 years time we’re talking about A15 architecture, and it appears this years A14 could already be exceeding 3GHz.
Apple has a pretty solid CPU crew these days.
Also: https://www.macrumors.com/2020/03/09/mac-pro-arm-performance/
The chip dude on the keynote was a proper Bond villain. I wouldn’t be surprised if he was building skynet, let alone xeon-level arm processors.
i hope you're true - we need to hold on Moore's law otherwise we will not reach planned artificial intelligence singularity in 2030 :-)
LOL
😄
Meanwhile I hope my friends at Ableton & Cycling aren’t getting headaches from all of this. Max especially will most likely be a ‘challenge’. 😬
today "meet audio workgroups" about audio apps related topics on WWDC .. maybe something interesting ... (you can watch it in "Developers" app)
You can also access the sessions here: https://developer.apple.com/videos/wwdc2020
ah cool.. so these:
https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2020/10224/
also this may bring potentially interesting information related to audio apps development
https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2020/10621/
“ Learn more about the power efficiency of System on a Chip (SoC) and how you can take advantage of new APIs to improve the speed and sound of your apps and plug-ins.”
Will be interesting to see what the new APIs will enable.
It's not about raw speed per instruction, it's about all the other stuff that AMD and Intel do to get high performance. Branch prediction/speculative execution, vectorization/SIMD instructions, cache coherence for multi-cores, caching techniques generally, pipelining. Apple's ARM chips are way behind in those kinds of areas. The point I'm trying to get across is that high performance is a different game, and if you're reading sites that don't mention that stuff then they don't know what they're talking about.
Another issue is that a lot of Apple's performance tricks are with custom silicon that you access with special libraries (e.g. the DSP stuff). Which is great for people who write code specifically for the Mac, but isn't going to help cross platform code (unless they put a lot of work into using those libraries). Most pro software is cross platform, as is most audio software.
A supercomputer is basically a giant graphics card. Just how you can't run most software on a graphics card, supercomputers are only useful for very specialized hugely parallel tasks. Also, supercomputers can (and have been) built with chips that were individually quite slow.
And I didn't say there was anything inherent to RISC that makes high performance possible. However current ARM processor technology (including Apple) does not have the kinds of features required to make desktop software run very fast. Can these things be solved? Probably. Can they be solved in the kinds of timescales being discussed? Possibly, but highly challenging and very expensive. It's not just a matter of taking an existing chip and throwing more cores at it.
From the Register:
So I think Apple know that their chips are not ready for the high end yet, and don't really have a good sense of when they will be. Interesting times. Intel is also starting to see competition in the cloud as Marvell and Ampere's chips are potentially quite competitive for virtual servers.
They will support the current systems. The move to Apple silicon will be completed in two years. That includes the pro machines.
How they will perform is the only question.
I've managed to convince myself
, so I'm gonna buy it tomorrow. 13", 16Gb, 0.5 or maybe 1 TB.
It's the end of the financial year here, most shops offer a 10% discount on Apple products
Apparently, the Files app in iOS/iPadOS 14 will support encrypted APFS disks: https://9to5mac.com/2020/06/26/apple-apfs-encrypted-drive-support-apfs-time-machine-backups/
That's awesome!
I don’t think you’ll regret it. Happy with mine, it’s got that ‘just works’ no-nonsense vibe, which was exactly what I needed. If I get 5+ years out of it I’ll be happy
My previous work machine was a Dell desktop. Worked fine, but apparently there was an issue with cracked motherboards, so they sent engineers around to replace them. Never worked properly after that.
I found this particularly insightful when considering WWDC:
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1275311056672325633.html
A lot of Superlatives about Apple Inc!
But, he have a lot of insight in the business so he probably knows what he talks about...
Sure, the Intel to Arm/Apple Silicone-thing is not s little thing, it’s huge to one of the biggest companies in the world... You getta be brave to make this transition ...