Apple intros new Mac Pro with "Nehalem" Xeon processors

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  • Reply 181 of 506
    winterspanwinterspan Posts: 605member
    Well, for everyone that wants to make excuses about the enormous price increase of mid-level Mac Pro configurations (bumping solely the CPU to dual 2.66Ghz from a base config gets you to $5000), I made a little chart. I knew despite the platform switch and all the hype that the new CPUs shouldn't cost much more than the older Harpertown Xeons did (when they were new). What I didn't realize is that the new Nehalems Xeons that the Mac Pro is using are even CHEAPER than their Apple equivalent from the old Mac Pro!





    Disclaimers:

    1) These prices were found from a few different sources, but I make no absolute guarantees that they are perfect.



    2) These prices represent unit cost in batches of 1000 at the time of initial release. Remember, Apple does NOT lower their prices over the lifecycle of a certain model even though the CPU costs may drop somewhat. Regardless this point is moot anyhow as server grade CPUs don't change price much if at all until a new, faster model/series is released.



    2) The single CPU xeon configuration (at least the base model) uses a different CPU from the Xeon 3xxx series. Price is unknown but should be somewhat similar to - if a little lower - than the equivalent of the dual-socket 5xxx series.





  • Reply 182 of 506
    hmurchisonhmurchison Posts: 12,425member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by winterspan View Post


    Well, for everyone that wants to make excuses about the enormous price increase of mid-level Mac Pro configurations (bumping solely the CPU to dual 2.66Ghz from a base config gets you to $5000), I made a little chart. I knew despite the platform switch and all the hype that the new CPUs shouldn't cost much more than the older Harpertown Xeons did (when they were new). What I didn't realize is that the new Nehalems Xeons that the Mac Pro is using are even CHEAPER than their Apple equivalent from the old Mac Pro!





    Disclaimers:

    1) These prices were found from a few different sources, but I make no absolute guarantees that they are perfect.



    2) These prices represent unit cost in batches of 1000 at the time of initial release. Remember, Apple does NOT lower their prices over the lifecycle of a certain model even though the CPU costs may drop somewhat. Regardless this point is moot anyhow as server grade CPUs don't change price much if at all until a new, faster model/series is released.



    2) The single CPU xeon configuration (at least the base model) uses a different CPU from the Xeon 3xxx series. Price is unknown but should be somewhat similar to - if a little lower - than the equivalent of the dual-socket 5xxx series.








    http://www.tomshardware.com/news/int...2009,6384.html



    Xeon 3500



    2.66Ghz- $284

    2.93- $562



    I'm not one to complain too much about pricing but it appears that Apple's recession strategy is clear. They are going to ensure they have the margins they need to ride through the chop.



    If I take a $2499 Quad Core Xeon



    Subtract:



    $400 for the CPU

    $200 for the RAM

    $150 for the case

    $70 for the HDD

    $100 for the GPU

    $200 for the Mobo

    $30 for the optical

    $40 for the input devices





    I'm still not coming close to figuring out where the fantom $800 or so dollars comes from. I can so no reason why the Quad Mac Pro should cost $2499. I can't see it.



    There is a healthy amount of margin in the new iMac and Mac Pro undoubtedly. I highly suspect that both will be revamped fairly soon in their cycle in particular the iMac when Core I5 becomes available. The Mac Pro may get a bump to 3.2Ghz and if we're lucky the pricing will shift down.
  • Reply 183 of 506
    i386i386 Posts: 91member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Last test in Macworld, the 3.06 GHz iMac beat out the mid range Mac Pro in PS. That's not surprising really.



    PS is currently limited to two cores (for ordinary work, there is a way to get 8 cores to work, but that's another story).



    For PS, the graphics card doesn't matter, though with 10.6 that may change somewhat.



    Of course, the Nehalem chips change the game. They are so much more powerful than even the Harperstown that Apple has been using in the previous Mac Pros, that they should blast past the top line iMac again.



    The single cpu four core machine is fine. That's like having two cpus, considering the new memory bandwidth of the chips.



    The 2.66 GHz version I ordered should be a good deal faster than the previous 2.93 GHz version, and possibly as fast as, or faster than the 3.2 GHz version.



    These chips are a game changer.



    Until the iMac goes Nehalem later with the mobile Nehalem chips (unless Apple changes their minds and goes lower power desktop chips, which is possible later) the iMac will trail the lower Mac Pro.



    But the iMac is pretty fast, so it may not matter unless, as I mentioned before, you're working with humongous sized files, which isn't likely.



    For current CS3/4 probably doesn't make any difference, but Aperture heavily depends on Quartz, I'm not sure if Lightroom does. As and when SL shows his faces more stuff could be handled by the GPU but knowing Adobe they won't take advantage of it till CS5.
  • Reply 184 of 506
    benroethigbenroethig Posts: 2,782member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by nowayout11 View Post


    Yay, a price increase. Sounds like Apple's suffering from their OWN reality distortion. Apparently "innovating through a recession" means innovative accounting.



    Yeah, they seem to be innovating unheard of kinds of margins. Premium pricing times 2 or 3



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Aizmov View Post


    Apple should really bring a midrange tower. Something with the desktop Core i7. The Mac Pro is too much with its server-grade Xeon processors.



    They did, that's what the quad core chips are. The xeon 3500 is the i7 with ECC memory support at the same price. They just raised the prices dramatically. The build costs for the new Mac Pros seem to be roughly that of the single CPU G5s they just raised the margin from the 30% range to unheard of territory.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by abeel View Post


    Which to buy - I have been waiting to upgrade my dual core G5 running Premier:





    Mac Pro:



    £4,426.01 incl. VAT Ships: 6-8 weeks Free Shipping

    Specifications

    One 2.93GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon

    6GB (3x2GB)

    Mac Pro RAID Card

    1TB 7200-rpm Serial ATA 3Gb/s

    ATI Radeon HD 4870 512MB

    One 18x SuperDrive

    Apple Cinema HD Display (30" flat panel)

    Apple Wireless Mighty Mouse

    Apple Wireless Keyboard (British) and User's Guide (English)



    Vista option:



    \tDell Ultrasharp 3008WFP 30" Widescreen LCD Monitor\t\t£1115.49

    \tIntel Core i7 940 2.93Ghz (Nehalem) (Socket LGA1366) - Retail\t\t£471.49

    \tLian Li TYR PC-X2000 Aluminium Full-Tower - Black (No PSU)\t\t£339.24

    \tAsus P6T Deluxe Intel X58 (Socket 1366) PCI-Express DDR3 Motherboard\t\t£243.79

    \tCorsair 6GB DDR3 Dominator PC3-12800C8 1600MHz (3x2GB) DDR3 £172.49

    \tAkasa AK-P120FG 1200W Xtreme Power Supply\t\t£166.74

    \tAsus ATI Radeon HD 4870 512MB "Dark Knight" \t£165.59

    \tMicrosoft Windows Vista Ultimate SP1 64-Bit - OEM (66R-02034)\t\t£155.24

    \tSeagate Barracuda 7200.11 1.5TB SATA-II 32MB Cache - \t£114.99

    \tLogitech Cordless Desktop MX 3200 Laser (967688-0120)\t\t£57.49

    \tAkasa AK-967 Nero Direct Contact Heatpipe CPU Cooler\t\t£31.04

    \tSamsung SH-S223Q/RSMN 22x DVD±RW SATA Dual Layel\t\t£22.99



    \t\tSub Total t£2,657.8



    My son has specced this setup, and tells can do the build.



    £1800 cost difference!!!!!



    The previous generation Xeon Mac Pros costed out about equal, considering dual socket boards etc, but these look over expensive to me. I need AVCHD, so an upgrade is now urgent.



    I may have to jump to Vista!



    Or I could buy a second hand 8 core Xeon?



    Am I missing something?



    I would wait until the new precisions are out for pricing comparisons. Still, I would expect the replacement for the T3400 to be substantially lower than the Quad Core Mac Pro.
  • Reply 185 of 506
    docno42docno42 Posts: 3,755member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Virgil-TB2 View Post


    The MacPro being what it is, could easily be designed so that a new motherboard (along with the new memory and processor architecture), could be dropped in, but yet again they haven't done that either. I'm just saying that with the almost complete lack of upgradeability from the flagship model introduced just last year, this thing might as well be a sealed box.



    If you take a closer look at each generation of the Mac Pro, you would notice that each is customized around it's motherboard. Each chipset/CPU combination used has different thermal requirements as well as different memory, which has necessitated design changes.



    These aren't generic PC's - big empty boxes that take generic components with cables running all over the place. These machines are engineered and tailored for their specific components. That attention to detail is what makes them extremely quiet (esp. compared to their generic PC brethren) and also easier to upgrade then comparable PC's.



    I, for one, appreciate the way Apple designs their machines. There isn't much value in being able to change out a motherboard - once you start changing two or more of CPU/Motherboard/Memory/Video Card you are almost always better off just building a new machine. Your pining for a false value proposition.



    And you can upgrade the CPU on your existing Mac Pro - google around. It's not Apple sanctioned, but there are those who have done it. Other then CPU and Memory (which are always tied together) you can change everything else out between the old system and the new system - just like on PC's! There is nothing special here with Apple, nor is Apple being restrictive. If you want to complain about lack of upgradability, you could argue that Mac GPU choices are severely restricted from those available to Windows PC's and I would heartily agree, but to state that "almost complete lack of upgradability" exists is just ignorant.



    To me, other then getting Nehalem the biggest advantage of the latest Mac Pro is finally ditching fully buffered DIMMs! That's probably responsible for as much of the speed increase as the new CPU's - FB DIMMs are latency filled evil....
  • Reply 186 of 506
    docno42docno42 Posts: 3,755member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by kim kap sol View Post


    It pains me to see what Apple is charging its customers for HD and RAM upgrades.



    Not that I'm excusing Apple in the least, but unfortunately it's no different then any other vendor out there. They count on most people not wanting to do the upgrades themselves after the fact and charge accordingly for the convenience
  • Reply 187 of 506
    mdriftmeyermdriftmeyer Posts: 7,503member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by hmurchison View Post


    http://www.tomshardware.com/news/int...2009,6384.html



    Xeon 3500



    2.66Ghz- $284

    2.93- $562



    I'm not one to complain too much about pricing but it appears that Apple's recession strategy is clear. They are going to ensure they have the margins they need to ride through the chop.



    If I take a $2499 Quad Core Xeon



    Subtract:



    $400 for the CPU

    $200 for the RAM

    $150 for the case

    $70 for the HDD

    $100 for the GPU

    $200 for the Mobo

    $30 for the optical

    $40 for the input devices





    I'm still not coming close to figuring out where the fantom $800 or so dollars comes from. I can so no reason why the Quad Mac Pro should cost $2499. I can't see it.



    There is a healthy amount of margin in the new iMac and Mac Pro undoubtedly. I highly suspect that both will be revamped fairly soon in their cycle in particular the iMac when Core I5 becomes available. The Mac Pro may get a bump to 3.2Ghz and if we're lucky the pricing will shift down.



    What's your reason for pricing Xeon 3500 CPUs?
  • Reply 188 of 506
    docno42docno42 Posts: 3,755member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by freakboy View Post


    Definitely not. You could build a faster, more RAM, more HD linux box for about 3K w/ better monitor.



    Yeah, and where are you going to get the non-shipping CPU's the new Mac Pro uses?
  • Reply 189 of 506
    irondollirondoll Posts: 17member
    So, two 2.26Ghz Nehalem Xeons are $848 cheaper than two 2.8Ghz Harpertown Xeons, yet this generation Octocore Mac Pro is $500 more expensive at retail price. Is that really accurate?



    This generation graphics card is cheap’n’cheerful (Nvidia just rebadged an old card from 2007), the memory is cheaper (though you get more of it), the motherboard should be cheaper (less complex thanks to integrated memory controller and quickconnects). Why isn’t this generation cheaper than the last, let alone more expensive!? I love my Mac Pro, and we want to order 4 of them, but the $2000 ($500X4) retail premium for cheaper (424*4=$1696 cheaper) CPUs over the previous generation is outrageous. Could someone please point out what is wrong here, why is this gap so big (is 'greening' the Mac Pro really *so* costly)?
  • Reply 190 of 506
    minderbinderminderbinder Posts: 1,703member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by BenRoethig View Post


    They could have, but unfortunately this is just another example of the components having to conform to the case instead of the case conforming to the components.



    I can see how 12 slots might require a case design, but the case certainly didn't stop them from putting six slots on the single CPU machine.



    The limit of four slots and 8 gigs of ram might even be a bigger downgrade than going from eight cores to four.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    We know Dell has cheaper machines. Compare their Nehalem Xeon workstations.



    Since the i7 is pretty much functionally the same as the xeon in the quad Mac Pro, seems like a totally valid comparison to me. Yes, I know there are minor differences (what besides ECC memory support?), but anything that would impact actual real world performance? Is there any reason to expect the quad MP to outperform the i7 dell?



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    And stop calling people "apologists".



    You'll probably see the end of "apologists" when people stop calling people "whiners".



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    One reason why the Mac Pro, older models, and new ones alike, are so expensive, is because they are industrial quality machines. What your son will build is a lower grade home quality machine. It's NOT equal to a Mc Pro.



    So what difference will a user see when running the same app on both machines? Slower app performance? More crashes? I'd like to know specifically.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by DocNo42 View Post


    Yeah, and where are you going to get the non-shipping CPU's the new Mac Pro uses?



    Wait a couple weeks?
  • Reply 191 of 506
    minderbinderminderbinder Posts: 1,703member
    Here's a question.



    Anyone think that the big price bump is due to supply constraints and Apple is just looking to take advantage of early adopters in the short term (in fairly small quantities), then either bring prices back down or bump all models back to 8 cores within a few months?



    I really suspect that people buying now will end up feeling like real suckers when the next update comes along - the big question is how soon will that be?
  • Reply 192 of 506
    benroethigbenroethig Posts: 2,782member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by mdriftmeyer View Post


    What's your reason for pricing Xeon 3500 CPUs?



    Probably because Apple is using them in the quad core models.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by irondoll View Post


    So, two 2.26Ghz Nehalem Xeons are $848 cheaper than two 2.8Ghz Harpertown Xeons, yet this generation Octocore Mac Pro is $500 more expensive at retail price. Is that really accurate?



    That seem to be accurate. Also, the chipset seems to be roughly the same price as the old 5400 and DDR3 ECC memory is a lot cheaper than the old FB-DIMMs. In fact, the quad core models might actually be similar to the old $1499/1699 powerMacs in production costs. It appears either intel is sticking to Apple or Apple is sticking it to the buyer...or both.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by minderbinder View Post


    Here's a question.



    Anyone think that the big price bump is due to supply constraints and Apple is just looking to take advantage of early adopters in the short term (in fairly small quantities), then either bring prices back down or bump all models back to 8 cores within a few months?



    I really suspect that people buying now will end up feeling like real suckers when the next update comes along - the big question is how soon will that be?



    I'm hoping this is only due to what intel is charging Apple and not some severe "we're the only one that can make OSX computers so we can extort whatever we want" case of greed. If its the later, they're showing Microsoft things about abusing users they never knew of. The new ones left premium pricing so far in the rear view mirror they can't see it anymore.
  • Reply 193 of 506
    outsideroutsider Posts: 6,008member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by BenRoethig View Post


    Probably because Apple is using them in the quad core models.



    And this was exactly what I hoped Apple would do, mainly to cut costs on the bottom range of workstations. Instead they jacked up the price to astronomical amounts. Folks, this is a $1799 computer at best. I can get it with an ADC discount at $1999 but it's still over priced IMO.
  • Reply 194 of 506
    benroethigbenroethig Posts: 2,782member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Outsider View Post


    And this was exactly what I hoped Apple would do, mainly to cut costs on the bottom range of workstations. Instead they jacked up the price to astronomical amounts. Folks, this is a $1799 computer at best. I can get it with an ADC discount at $1999 but it's still over priced IMO.



    Yeah, you're looking at the old low end PowerMac with a massive price increase. The price of the 8-core models can be explained if they had a discount deal and intel is charging them more. The quad core isn't see easy to explain without higher margins. Its much cheaper to produce than the old 2.83ghz model and even cheaper if they're using the x58SP northbridge instead of the x58DP in the 8-cores.
  • Reply 195 of 506
    tony1tony1 Posts: 259member
    Okay after a nights sleep and throwing this around I may need to recant my previous buying statement.



    I'll mainly need a new machine to run FCP Studio, which of course includes Motion that needs the horsepower so-to-speak. Considering pricing would I be happier with a previous version 2.8Ghzx2 for $2698 or the current 2.66Ghzx2 for $4304. Is the $1600 difference worth it for my application. Will the new bus speed and CPU design outweigh the price difference? I'm still getting to know FCP, yet I tend to hang on to a machine for a while and don't want to feel real limited in a few years if I went with the older model.



    $4304 is based on the education price of the new model:

    # Two 2.66GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon

    # 6GB (6x1GB)

    # 640GB 7200-rpm Serial ATA 3Gb/s

    # NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 512MB

    # One 18x SuperDrive

    # Apple Mighty Mouse

    # Apple Keyboard with Numeric Keypad (English) and User's Guide

    # AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi Card with 802.11n



    $2698 is based on Macmall and the previous model:

    # Two 2.8GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon

    # 2GB (6x1GB)

    # 320GB Serial ATA 3Gb/s Unsure of the rpm speed

    # ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT

    # One 16x SuperDrive

    # Apple Mighty Mouse

    # AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi Card with 802.11n



    In either machine:

    Video cards I would swap out in 6 mos for possibly an ATI Radeon HD 4870.

    I have two 1TB Seagates and two WD Velociraptor's that I would drop in, so drives aren't an issue.

    And of course I'd increase RAM in 6 mos.



    I don't want to go iMac, so please don't suggest it.



    Thanks for any help.
  • Reply 196 of 506
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by akbars02 View Post


    I have two 24" Samsung Monitors which I run through DVI. I want to buy the new Mac Pro with ATI 4870 card. But it only has 1 DVI port. Will I be able to connect one monitor to DVI port and one to Mini Display Port (Mini to DVI adapter) and run both with Extended Desktop mode?



    Once you buy the DP to DVI adapter from Apple... for 99 bucks (plus tax, thus over 100 bucks)!
  • Reply 197 of 506
    hmurchisonhmurchison Posts: 12,425member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Outsider View Post


    And this was exactly what I hoped Apple would do, mainly to cut costs on the bottom range of workstations. Instead they jacked up the price to astronomical amounts. Folks, this is a $1799 computer at best. I can get it with an ADC discount at $1999 but it's still over priced IMO.



    Yes based on what I can see the Quad Mac Pro is a $2k computer with a hefty margin appied. It's going to get ugly when the PC World rags of the world start showing the basic $1200 Core I7 pc beating the Mac pro in performance



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Tony1 View Post


    Okay after a nights sleep and throwing this around I may need to recant my previous buying statement.



    I'll mainly need a new machine to run FCP Studio, which of course includes Motion that needs the horsepower so-to-speak. Considering pricing would I be happier with a previous version 2.8Ghzx2 for $2698 or the current 2.66Ghzx2 for $4304. Is the $1600 difference worth it for my application. Will the new bus speed and CPU design outweigh the price difference? I'm still getting to know FCP, yet I tend to hang on to a machine for a while and don't want to feel real limited in a few years if I went with the older model.





    In either machine:

    Video cards I would swap out in 6 mos for possibly an ATI Radeon HD 4870.

    I have two 1TB Seagates and two WD Velociraptor's that I would drop in, so drives aren't an issue.

    And of course I'd increase RAM in 6 mos.



    I don't want to go iMac, so please don't suggest it.



    Thanks for any help.



    I'd grab the more affordable 2.8Ghz system. Nehalem is a great architecture but it's the Tick of the new architecture meaning that Intel's "Tick Tock" strategy is to deliver a new architecture every two years followed by a process shrink. The former 2.8Ghz Xeons were the "tock" of the last architecture. You may want to take advantage of the pricing advantage and that will easily carry you for a few years by the time you upgrade your Mac Pro you'll be looking at Sandy Bridge which will bring 4Ghz and 8-cores on a single die. You can't lose either way it's going to take a year to two years for Apple to get their apps and 3rd parties multithreading their apps properly to take advantage of these cores.
  • Reply 198 of 506
    gmcalpingmcalpin Posts: 266member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Tony1 View Post


    I'll mainly need a new machine to run FCP Studio, which of course includes Motion that needs the horsepower so-to-speak. Considering pricing would I be happier with a previous version 2.8Ghzx2 for $2698 or the current 2.66Ghzx2 for $4304. Is the $1600 difference worth it for my application. Will the new bus speed and CPU design outweigh the price difference? I'm still getting to know FCP, yet I tend to hang on to a machine for a while and don't want to feel real limited in a few years if I went with the older model.



    Wait for MacWorld's benchmarks next week or so. With 16 virtual cores, the new 2x2.66 GHz should blow the old eight-core 2x2.8GHz out of the water.



    I would bet money that, all things considered, the new 2.93 Quad will turn out faster than the old eight-core 2x2.8. It had better; it costs $200 more. Of course, you can't throw as much RAM into it. But with at least one early benchmark on the processors alone showing new 2x2.8 configurations outpacing the old 2x3.4's by a huge margin (177%), I'd bet the new 2x2.26's are faster than the old 2x2.8's, as well.



    Another thing to factor in is the cost of RAM. Aren't FB-DIMMs more expensive than DDR3 1066?
  • Reply 199 of 506
    gmcalpingmcalpin Posts: 266member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by ClassicGuy View Post


    Once you buy the DP to DVI adapter from Apple... for 99 bucks (plus tax, thus over 100 bucks)!



    That's the dual link DVI, for Cinema Displays. For his Samsungs, he'll want the MiniDisplayPort > DVI-D adapter, which is $30.
  • Reply 200 of 506
    solipsismsolipsism Posts: 25,726member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by minderbinder View Post


    Here's a question.



    Anyone think that the big price bump is due to supply constraints and Apple is just looking to take advantage of early adopters in the short term (in fairly small quantities), then either bring prices back down or bump all models back to 8 cores within a few months?



    I really suspect that people buying now will end up feeling like real suckers when the next update comes along - the big question is how soon will that be?



    That seems very likely. After all, these are chips that aren't officially out yet/
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