I feel your pain. Hang on, I am sure it is coming soon.. Hopefully, it will be worth the wait. Apple might have to come out with a monitor to handle 4K for the Red camera crowd as that crowd is growing.
With no ODD and SSD instead of HD, that's two motors gone. I wonder if, on a model with integrated graphics only, they could make a fanless design?
The HD Graphics 4000 can push up to 2560x1600 I believe, enough for Retina on a small screen.
It would be completely absurd to make such compromises for a desktop machine, as if there's one place where power trumps EVERYTHING, it's on the desktop. Desktops are work horses, they need to run Photoshop, Maya, Zbrush, and a plethora of other high end apps, and for that they need a massive amount of storage and huge CPU power. Optical drives are also useful if for nothing else than to install drivers, look at people's portfolio CDs, ripp CDs and DVDs, and generally maintain back compatibility.
Except your retina is in your eye, so with a brand name like that, it's not really spin (or any kind of late addition) to include viewing distance.
Your right a retina can be found in my eye. However, the definition of what constitutes a "retina display" is entirely up to Apple's marketing department.
Your right a retina can be found in my eye. However, the definition of what constitutes a "retina display" is entirely up to Apple's marketing department.
-kpluck
And they defined it years ago by saying that it's the inability for someone with the accepted "normal" vision to distinguish individual pixels while holding a "normal" distance from their eyes. There is nothing sneaky about how they marketed the term.
I think Apple pushes rumors so that their competitors get scared and spend money on impossible tasks. The magic of Apple is sometimes just misdirection.
The PPI in and of itself has no barring on if it's a Retina Display or not. You have to also include the distance the eyes are from the display.
Here is a chart that shows that the larger the display the closer we have been to having Retina quality displays.
As you say, there are no tech that can feasibly double the current iMac displays which is why it will be a double of the smaller resolution noted already. This means that the elements on the screen will be slightly larger because they will have a 1x PPI that is smaller (even though it's unbelievably more crisp). Personally I prefer that which is why I never bought a HiRes MBP in the past as it just made the elements too small for my liking.
Several current Macs are very close to "Retina" now. My guess would be Apple going to 4K displays on the larger iMacs (3800'ish horizontal) and at least 144 dpi on the portables. They could then go back to a 72 DPI (x2) default display resolution and get back to WYSIWYG. Right now with a screen at about 109 DPI I usually view documents at 150%. A 144 DPI display I could view at 2X for the same size document text, but much clearer text, and larger interface features. People who want to cram as much info as possible as possible on the screen can view documents at 75%, 50% etc.
I think Apple pushes rumors so that their competitors get scared and spend money on impossible tasks. The magic of Apple is sometimes just misdirection.
That is certainly a tactic companies at the top can do to help maintain their lead. However, historically we've seen that happen by touting vaporware products that never comes to fruition but scares competitors into trying and keeps saucer-eyed users waiting for the next big thing. If Apple is doing that they are doing it in a new way by keeping everything close to the chest and only leaking rumours that may or may not be true.
I'm inclined to think that is as likely as Apple leaking actual plans so they can gauge the reaction of the media and internet posters to see if this product will b a hit since they don't do standard focus groups.
I don't care too much about the details but I am waiting for the model refresh to get a new iMac. A screen resolution upgrade sounds like a great improvement to me. For my kind of use I don't really care (much) if it's faster than my old one, ya that's nice but kind of expected too. Apple knows if your going to sell an all-in-one it better have a great looking screen and good sound too. Can't wait but I gotta save up just a little more $$ too…
Several current Macs are very close to "Retina" now. My guess would be Apple going to 4K displays on the larger iMacs (3800'ish horizontal) and at least 144 dpi on the portables. They could then go back to a 72 DPI (x2) default display resolution and get back to WYSIWYG. Right now with a screen at about 109 DPI I usually view documents at 150%. A 144 DPI display I could view at 2X for the same size document text, but much clearer text, and larger interface features. People who want to cram as much info as possible as possible on the screen can view documents at 75%, 50% etc.
As noted on the first page, i think 168 PPI (3840x240), thus going back to the 84 PPI (19201200) representation for screen elements, makes the most sense to me for the 27" iMac.
We probably won't see them till Ivy Bridge Socket 2011 chips are available if ever. I somehow doubt they'll use the E3 since it's exactly the same as an i7 with ECC support.
As for "Retina" screen's on an iMac, that might be the only incentive, to use an iMac over everything but the Macmini and Mac Pro, but only if they don't make it as a separate monitor. I'd rather buy the monitor once and have it last as long as possible.
My beef with HiDPI screens (I had a 1920x1200 15" laptop with the worst nVidia chip ever in it) is that the underlying graphics chip is woefully underpowered, and either you run it at native resolution and scale up the UI, or the graphics adapter (or monitor hardware) will stretch it in ways that look terrible.
The display and required graphic power will drain the battery in half the time. So instead of getting 7 hrs of battery in a MBP, it'll be more like 3.5 hrs.
Very fuzzy math. "Pixel doubling" as used in the new iPad is not required to reach "Retina" quality in the Mac lines as noted below, and the ODD will be gone in at least the notebooks. With the new form factors, tho, not certain how much extra space (if any) will be available for batteries. However, as noted in the thread, batteries are improving (not as fast as other components unfortunately, but improving).
And I for one expect the ODD's to be gone in the AIO's as well - just as the floppies exited - since they're used by a shrinking minority of users. In all things Apple, thin is in, even if 20-30% (including me) will own an external ODD for a few situations for a bit yet - e.g., to access some legacy content I have on them.
But they are on the way out. Thumb drives with the capacity of a DVD-R are now frequent giveaways at trade shows, i.e., they're getting really cheap, and the new "send a link" features in free online storage/sharing services like DropBox, and pure sending via sites like "Yousendit.com" are combining to "superannuate" the now ever-more-archaic CD and DVD-Rs altogether. I'm now sending these links to friends all the time instead of burning discs and attaching files to emails. Faster, simpler and FREE.
SSD's are, I believe, more power efficient than HDD's as well (speaking at least when they're "the drive" - not in terms of bits per watt or something like that). I'm personally a little fuzzy myself on power efficiency gains in Ivy Bridge, but with Haswell being the "tock" cycle to Ivy's "tick," more power efficiency is on the way. And then there's the cost of components to achieve all this "resolutionary" magic. So the screens we're variously salivating over and complaining about here could still be a year away. Or not.
But crisper displays at human eye friendly element sizes are inevitable. And it looks as if Apple will be a, if not the, leader in this trend.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SolipsismX
The PPI in and of itself has no barring on if it's a Retina Display or not. You have to also include the distance the eyes are from the display.
Here is a chart that shows that the larger the display the closer we have been to having Retina quality displays.
As you say, there are no tech that can feasibly double the current iMac displays which is why it will be a double of the smaller resolution noted already. This means that the elements on the screen will be slightly larger because they will have a 1x PPI that is smaller (even though it's unbelievably more crisp). Personally I prefer that which is why I never bought a HiRes MBP in the past as it just made the elements too small for my liking.
There appears to be some confusion on many people's parts about the various terms being thrown about, e.g., "HiDpi," "Resolution Independent," Retina Display, Pixel Doubling, etc. There's also manifest mis-info on "real estate" vs. "resolution." A HiDpi display, though, will very likely not function in the same way as previous increases in Mac screen resolution which allowed more of said real estate though at smaller element sizes in a given screen size.
I admittedly don't understand all that's involved either - but I think I grok that lots of re-engineering will be required at the OS level to avoid having to buy new "retinized" versions of all my previous software or else have to stare at lots of tiny elements. OS X is based on decades old concepts of a computer OS. I've read that at the moment there's a mix on test bed machines using the limited number of things, e.g., the new higher-res icons and other parts of what's displayed. June (or a bit later) seems ambitious to pull all this together, but that's why I'm an amateur forum poster and not an Apple engineer.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tallest Skil
The graphics probably can't handle it on either the desktops or laptops… and the laptops will destroy their battery life!
We're JUST getting rid of the optical drive right now to make room for a bigger battery. Do we REALLY want super high-res displays to get rid of the benefits of that new battery?!
HASWELL. I just remembered. Haswell's supposed to give us 24 hours of battery life. What if instead we get 12 hours of battery life and HiDPI displays with Haswell?!
I'm liking that. It gives display manufacturers the time to actually MAKE these displays and it gives Apple time to get situated with their ODD-free computers with bigger batteries.
Discussed above - but if Apple can jump the gun - make a thinner, higher-res (with usable elements), faster pro at current price points with reasonable battery life, they almost certainly will. But they might settle for the new form factor, processor family, 811ac (and who knows, maybe LTE), plus more tie-ins to an improved iCloud as the talking points (and add the rest of the wish list with Haswell and the next cat). Also, whether "independent" or "hi" or not, I doubt they'll let Samsung and/or or Dell "out-res" them in the 15" model.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ascii
You don't have to run it in Retina mode.
See above, but actually if "Retina mode" comes to the Mac it will be the default, and while Macs have long had alternate display modes besides their "native mode," not sure how this will function in some new res-independent approach to screen display.
Quote:
Originally Posted by kpluck
I am guessing that for the desktop, Apple will target 4K displays for resolution. Then the marketing department will just spin the definition of "retina" display to something that includes viewing distance and perceived resolution.
They do seem to be heading to a resolution independent OS
Given the Eizo $36K price point and the cost of SSD storage, this could take a bit to become consumer mainstream. However recent shows have been loaded with 4K cams as low as $2500 - down from $25,000 about two years ago, 4K does seem to be on the way. Not just yet though....
Quote:
Originally Posted by wally626
Several current Macs are very close to "Retina" now. My guess would be Apple going to 4K displays on the larger iMacs (3800'ish horizontal) and at least 144 dpi on the portables. They could then go back to a 72 DPI (x2) default display resolution and get back to WYSIWYG. Right now with a screen at about 109 DPI I usually view documents at 150%. A 144 DPI display I could view at 2X for the same size document text, but much clearer text, and larger interface features. People who want to cram as much info as possible as possible on the screen can view documents at 75%, 50% etc.
Even with "sugar on top" I kind of doubt it. Still, even if Apple's phasing out of the "semi-truck" line it makes sense to release at least one more rev with TB to extend the working life among all the dedicated pros. That one could extend the lifetime of the current long-in-the-tooth model for at least as long as it's been out because of the ability to upgrade various components via TB. One thing I don't know is whether it's sensible to include a TB bus INSIDE the machine as well as in a port..
One more factor is that Intel's announced that an all-optical upgrade is in the works and Apple might wait for that.
Or they might just exit the "workstation" business. Doesn't make sense to me to not allow Mac users to make an upgrade to machines suitable for truly professional production work - which has long been part of their "aura" and abandon their "traditional base" when it seems like it could still be profitable, if a small component of their profits - but their bread and butter is now consumer electronics and they are a focused company.
Good point. It is easy to blow up browser, doc and pic size elements on PC's. And if Apple's already upsized the icons they're probably doing the same on other standard UI elements like menus, info balloons, etc.
Only the bitmapped images will increase in size. Overall the OS barely grows in size once you remove these Retina images from the equation because most UI elements are drawn and coding the system to draw for 2x pixels instead of 1x pixel requires very little.
There were plenty of article and blogs gasping at how large Retina apps for the iPad (3) were becoming but that's an app, not the OS, and that's for a non-windowed system. OS X will see a much smaller growth percentage because of 2x images than an iOS app. One of the apps that was used to "prove" that the iPad (3) was bad for users was iMovie, but before the update it was only for the iPhone so they went from including code for the two form factors and 4 different image sizes, which is why it grew so much.
Does anyone else think that I'd rather keep the current screen resolutions and put the cost savings of not getting Retina Displays into performance boosting things like...SSD, More RAM, Better Graphics? It just doesn't make sense for me, I have horrible bandwidth already I am not even taking advantage of my iMac for its 1080P rez, when I do web design work the current screens take care of everything. The biggest factors for me are RAM/SSD.
Does anyone else think that I'd rather keep the current screen resolutions and put the cost savings of not getting Retina Displays into performance boosting things like...SSD, More RAM, Better Graphics?
The prices aren't going to change anyway, so what's the difference?
Quote:
It just doesn't make sense for me, I have horrible bandwidth already I am not even taking advantage of my iMac for its 1080P rez, when I do web design work the current screens take care of everything. The biggest factors for me are RAM/SSD.
So buy more RAM and get an SSD. Retina displays are to make what you're seeing that much sharper and more beautiful.
I agree. I also don't know of any mainstream graphics chips that will handle that resolution. Rumormongers ought to at least check on whether something is plausible.
ETA:
I may have been wrong about the graphics chips. Modern chips are getting close to being able to handle that resolution:
This is a three screen setup at 5760x1080. Not quite what TS was referring to, but it's closer than I thought - and suggests that it just might be possible with a high end video card.
They will, however, have to come up with some new initials for a screen that size:
If Apple wanted seeing as AMD Crossfire is an option they could put 2 7770M chips on-board to push through their Thunderbolt Output.
Quote:
As of January 2012, the latest HD 7000 series graphics cards - along with a dual-link DVI connector and a HDMI connector - feature support for two Mini DisplayPorts 1.2, allowing daisy-chaining up to six monitors, up to 4096x2160 (4K resolution) or 2560x1600p60 Stereoscopic 3D per display and high bit-rate audio from the same connector, optionally behaving like a single large display. A DisplayPort hub containing three dual-link DVI connectors is also available.
HiDPI doesn't mean an automatic doubling of Pixels on a display. With each 7770M putting out 55W TDP having a mere 110W TDP supporting HiDPI that Apple depicts for upcoming Displays they sell which don't need to be this mythical 5120x2880 display will invariably drive Panel ppi for large screens forward and people readdressing the meaning of Retina and having to be reminded the difference between a 3.5" screen to a 10" screen to a 27" screen.
The point i'm making is instead of having some super high-res screen as standard I'd rather have an SSD & more RAM standard. Say the current screens cost $200 and the newer screens cost $400, I'd rather apple take the $200 keep the original screens now and throw that towards an SSD in place of a stand HDD.
The point i'm making is instead of having some super high-res screen as standard I'd rather have an SSD & more RAM standard. Say the current screens cost $200 and the newer screens cost $400, I'd rather apple take the $200 keep the original screens now and throw that towards an SSD in place of a stand HDD.
Point taken, but they're not gonna give us more RAM or an SSD standard. Sure, we could see 4GB in the 11" and 13" MacBook, but I don't think we'll see 8GB standard in anything but the 17" MacBook, and even that's pushing it.
Comments
This will be nice... Especially when the iMac gets overly warm doing say video compression, heats up and permanently yellows the new high res screen.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MacMichiel
Can i have my new Mac Pro first please ???
I feel your pain. Hang on, I am sure it is coming soon.. Hopefully, it will be worth the wait. Apple might have to come out with a monitor to handle 4K for the Red camera crowd as that crowd is growing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ascii
With no ODD and SSD instead of HD, that's two motors gone. I wonder if, on a model with integrated graphics only, they could make a fanless design?
The HD Graphics 4000 can push up to 2560x1600 I believe, enough for Retina on a small screen.
It would be completely absurd to make such compromises for a desktop machine, as if there's one place where power trumps EVERYTHING, it's on the desktop. Desktops are work horses, they need to run Photoshop, Maya, Zbrush, and a plethora of other high end apps, and for that they need a massive amount of storage and huge CPU power. Optical drives are also useful if for nothing else than to install drivers, look at people's portfolio CDs, ripp CDs and DVDs, and generally maintain back compatibility.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ascii
Except your retina is in your eye, so with a brand name like that, it's not really spin (or any kind of late addition) to include viewing distance.
Your right a retina can be found in my eye. However, the definition of what constitutes a "retina display" is entirely up to Apple's marketing department.
-kpluck
I think Apple pushes rumors so that their competitors get scared and spend money on impossible tasks. The magic of Apple is sometimes just misdirection.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SolipsismX
The PPI in and of itself has no barring on if it's a Retina Display or not. You have to also include the distance the eyes are from the display.
Here is a chart that shows that the larger the display the closer we have been to having Retina quality displays.
As you say, there are no tech that can feasibly double the current iMac displays which is why it will be a double of the smaller resolution noted already. This means that the elements on the screen will be slightly larger because they will have a 1x PPI that is smaller (even though it's unbelievably more crisp). Personally I prefer that which is why I never bought a HiRes MBP in the past as it just made the elements too small for my liking.
Several current Macs are very close to "Retina" now. My guess would be Apple going to 4K displays on the larger iMacs (3800'ish horizontal) and at least 144 dpi on the portables. They could then go back to a 72 DPI (x2) default display resolution and get back to WYSIWYG. Right now with a screen at about 109 DPI I usually view documents at 150%. A 144 DPI display I could view at 2X for the same size document text, but much clearer text, and larger interface features. People who want to cram as much info as possible as possible on the screen can view documents at 75%, 50% etc.
That is certainly a tactic companies at the top can do to help maintain their lead. However, historically we've seen that happen by touting vaporware products that never comes to fruition but scares competitors into trying and keeps saucer-eyed users waiting for the next big thing. If Apple is doing that they are doing it in a new way by keeping everything close to the chest and only leaking rumours that may or may not be true.
I'm inclined to think that is as likely as Apple leaking actual plans so they can gauge the reaction of the media and internet posters to see if this product will b a hit since they don't do standard focus groups.
As noted on the first page, i think 168 PPI (3840x240), thus going back to the 84 PPI (19201200) representation for screen elements, makes the most sense to me for the 27" iMac.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MacMichiel
Can i have my new Mac Pro first please ???
We probably won't see them till Ivy Bridge Socket 2011 chips are available if ever. I somehow doubt they'll use the E3 since it's exactly the same as an i7 with ECC support.
As for "Retina" screen's on an iMac, that might be the only incentive, to use an iMac over everything but the Macmini and Mac Pro, but only if they don't make it as a separate monitor. I'd rather buy the monitor once and have it last as long as possible.
My beef with HiDPI screens (I had a 1920x1200 15" laptop with the worst nVidia chip ever in it) is that the underlying graphics chip is woefully underpowered, and either you run it at native resolution and scale up the UI, or the graphics adapter (or monitor hardware) will stretch it in ways that look terrible.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Misa
We probably won't see them till Ivy Bridge Socket 2011 chips are available if ever.
Ivy Bridge Xeons won't be out until next year. Sandy Bridge Xeons just came out, so they're next for the update.
At the proper usable distance of an iMac it wouldn't take much of a boost to get it into the "retina display" range.
Personally I don't think it needs it. I need to update my 24" iMac anyway so anything is a bonus.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bloggerblog
The display and required graphic power will drain the battery in half the time. So instead of getting 7 hrs of battery in a MBP, it'll be more like 3.5 hrs.
Very fuzzy math. "Pixel doubling" as used in the new iPad is not required to reach "Retina" quality in the Mac lines as noted below, and the ODD will be gone in at least the notebooks. With the new form factors, tho, not certain how much extra space (if any) will be available for batteries. However, as noted in the thread, batteries are improving (not as fast as other components unfortunately, but improving).
And I for one expect the ODD's to be gone in the AIO's as well - just as the floppies exited - since they're used by a shrinking minority of users. In all things Apple, thin is in, even if 20-30% (including me) will own an external ODD for a few situations for a bit yet - e.g., to access some legacy content I have on them.
But they are on the way out. Thumb drives with the capacity of a DVD-R are now frequent giveaways at trade shows, i.e., they're getting really cheap, and the new "send a link" features in free online storage/sharing services like DropBox, and pure sending via sites like "Yousendit.com" are combining to "superannuate" the now ever-more-archaic CD and DVD-Rs altogether. I'm now sending these links to friends all the time instead of burning discs and attaching files to emails. Faster, simpler and FREE.
SSD's are, I believe, more power efficient than HDD's as well (speaking at least when they're "the drive" - not in terms of bits per watt or something like that). I'm personally a little fuzzy myself on power efficiency gains in Ivy Bridge, but with Haswell being the "tock" cycle to Ivy's "tick," more power efficiency is on the way. And then there's the cost of components to achieve all this "resolutionary" magic. So the screens we're variously salivating over and complaining about here could still be a year away. Or not.
But crisper displays at human eye friendly element sizes are inevitable. And it looks as if Apple will be a, if not the, leader in this trend.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SolipsismX
The PPI in and of itself has no barring on if it's a Retina Display or not. You have to also include the distance the eyes are from the display.
Here is a chart that shows that the larger the display the closer we have been to having Retina quality displays.
As you say, there are no tech that can feasibly double the current iMac displays which is why it will be a double of the smaller resolution noted already. This means that the elements on the screen will be slightly larger because they will have a 1x PPI that is smaller (even though it's unbelievably more crisp). Personally I prefer that which is why I never bought a HiRes MBP in the past as it just made the elements too small for my liking.
There appears to be some confusion on many people's parts about the various terms being thrown about, e.g., "HiDpi," "Resolution Independent," Retina Display, Pixel Doubling, etc. There's also manifest mis-info on "real estate" vs. "resolution." A HiDpi display, though, will very likely not function in the same way as previous increases in Mac screen resolution which allowed more of said real estate though at smaller element sizes in a given screen size.
I admittedly don't understand all that's involved either - but I think I grok that lots of re-engineering will be required at the OS level to avoid having to buy new "retinized" versions of all my previous software or else have to stare at lots of tiny elements. OS X is based on decades old concepts of a computer OS. I've read that at the moment there's a mix on test bed machines using the limited number of things, e.g., the new higher-res icons and other parts of what's displayed. June (or a bit later) seems ambitious to pull all this together, but that's why I'm an amateur forum poster and not an Apple engineer.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tallest Skil
The graphics probably can't handle it on either the desktops or laptops… and the laptops will destroy their battery life!
We're JUST getting rid of the optical drive right now to make room for a bigger battery. Do we REALLY want super high-res displays to get rid of the benefits of that new battery?!
HASWELL. I just remembered. Haswell's supposed to give us 24 hours of battery life. What if instead we get 12 hours of battery life and HiDPI displays with Haswell?!
I'm liking that. It gives display manufacturers the time to actually MAKE these displays and it gives Apple time to get situated with their ODD-free computers with bigger batteries.
Discussed above - but if Apple can jump the gun - make a thinner, higher-res (with usable elements), faster pro at current price points with reasonable battery life, they almost certainly will. But they might settle for the new form factor, processor family, 811ac (and who knows, maybe LTE), plus more tie-ins to an improved iCloud as the talking points (and add the rest of the wish list with Haswell and the next cat). Also, whether "independent" or "hi" or not, I doubt they'll let Samsung and/or or Dell "out-res" them in the 15" model.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ascii
You don't have to run it in Retina mode.
See above, but actually if "Retina mode" comes to the Mac it will be the default, and while Macs have long had alternate display modes besides their "native mode," not sure how this will function in some new res-independent approach to screen display.
Quote:
Originally Posted by kpluck
I am guessing that for the desktop, Apple will target 4K displays for resolution. Then the marketing department will just spin the definition of "retina" display to something that includes viewing distance and perceived resolution.
They do seem to be heading to a resolution independent OS
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/UserExperience/Conceptual/HiDPIOverview/Introduction/Introduction.html
-kpluck
Quote:
Originally Posted by MacMichiel
Dream on. Eizo recently announced a 4K display. The first in the world. It will cost around 36.000 $.
http://www.engadget.com/2011/06/21/eizo-industrial-monitor-does-4k-resolution-at-36-inches-start-s/
Given the Eizo $36K price point and the cost of SSD storage, this could take a bit to become consumer mainstream. However recent shows have been loaded with 4K cams as low as $2500 - down from $25,000 about two years ago, 4K does seem to be on the way. Not just yet though....
Quote:
Originally Posted by wally626
Several current Macs are very close to "Retina" now. My guess would be Apple going to 4K displays on the larger iMacs (3800'ish horizontal) and at least 144 dpi on the portables. They could then go back to a 72 DPI (x2) default display resolution and get back to WYSIWYG. Right now with a screen at about 109 DPI I usually view documents at 150%. A 144 DPI display I could view at 2X for the same size document text, but much clearer text, and larger interface features. People who want to cram as much info as possible as possible on the screen can view documents at 75%, 50% etc.
Good point. It is easy to blow up browser, doc and pic size elements on PC's. And if Apple's already upsized the icons they're probably doing the same on other standard UI elements like menus, info balloons, etc. And workarounds are already emerging: http://www.macworld.com/article/1166811/automatically_zoom_safari_pages_on_launch.html
Quote:
Originally Posted by MacMichiel
Can i have my new Mac Pro first please ???
Even with "sugar on top" I kind of doubt it. Still, even if Apple's phasing out of the "semi-truck" line it makes sense to release at least one more rev with TB to extend the working life among all the dedicated pros. That one could extend the lifetime of the current long-in-the-tooth model for at least as long as it's been out because of the ability to upgrade various components via TB. One thing I don't know is whether it's sensible to include a TB bus INSIDE the machine as well as in a port..
One more factor is that Intel's announced that an all-optical upgrade is in the works and Apple might wait for that.
Or they might just exit the "workstation" business. Doesn't make sense to me to not allow Mac users to make an upgrade to machines suitable for truly professional production work - which has long been part of their "aura" and abandon their "traditional base" when it seems like it could still be profitable, if a small component of their profits - but their bread and butter is now consumer electronics and they are a focused company.
Only the bitmapped images will increase in size. Overall the OS barely grows in size once you remove these Retina images from the equation because most UI elements are drawn and coding the system to draw for 2x pixels instead of 1x pixel requires very little.
There were plenty of article and blogs gasping at how large Retina apps for the iPad (3) were becoming but that's an app, not the OS, and that's for a non-windowed system. OS X will see a much smaller growth percentage because of 2x images than an iOS app. One of the apps that was used to "prove" that the iPad (3) was bad for users was iMovie, but before the update it was only for the iPhone so they went from including code for the two form factors and 4 different image sizes, which is why it grew so much.
Does anyone else think that I'd rather keep the current screen resolutions and put the cost savings of not getting Retina Displays into performance boosting things like...SSD, More RAM, Better Graphics? It just doesn't make sense for me, I have horrible bandwidth already I am not even taking advantage of my iMac for its 1080P rez, when I do web design work the current screens take care of everything. The biggest factors for me are RAM/SSD.
Quote:
Originally Posted by AandcMedia
Does anyone else think that I'd rather keep the current screen resolutions and put the cost savings of not getting Retina Displays into performance boosting things like...SSD, More RAM, Better Graphics?
The prices aren't going to change anyway, so what's the difference?
Quote:
It just doesn't make sense for me, I have horrible bandwidth already I am not even taking advantage of my iMac for its 1080P rez, when I do web design work the current screens take care of everything. The biggest factors for me are RAM/SSD.
So buy more RAM and get an SSD. Retina displays are to make what you're seeing that much sharper and more beautiful.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jragosta
I agree. I also don't know of any mainstream graphics chips that will handle that resolution. Rumormongers ought to at least check on whether something is plausible.
ETA:
I may have been wrong about the graphics chips. Modern chips are getting close to being able to handle that resolution:
http://hexus.net/tech/reviews/graphics/37253-three-screen-geforce-gtx-680-vs-radeon-hd-7970/
This is a three screen setup at 5760x1080. Not quite what TS was referring to, but it's closer than I thought - and suggests that it just might be possible with a high end video card.
They will, however, have to come up with some new initials for a screen that size:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphic_display_resolutions
http://www.amd.com/us/products/desktop/graphics/7000/7770/Pages/radeon-7770.aspx#2
Quote:
Cutting-edge integrated display support
DisplayPort 1.2
Max resolution: 4096x2160 per display
Multi-Stream Transport
21.6 Gbps bandwidth
High bit-rate audio
Quad HD/4k video support
1080p60 Stereoscopic 3D
HDMI® (With 4K, 3D, Deep Color and x.v.Color™)
Max resolution: 4096x2160
2560x1600p60 Stereoscopic 3D
Quad HD/4k video support
Dual-link DVI with HDCP
Max resolution: 2560x1600
VGA
Max resolution: 2048x1536
The Current 27" Display is: 2560 by 1440 pixels
The AMD 7770M for Mobile format is as follows:
Quote:
Cutting-edge integrated display support
DisplayPort 1.2
Max resolution: 2560x1600 per display
Multi-Stream Transport
21.6 Gbps bandwidth
High bit-rate audio
HDMI (with 3D, 4k, Deep Color, x.v.Color)
Max resolution: 4096x3112
1080p60 Stereoscopic 3D
Quad HD/4k video support
Dual-link DVI with HDCP
Max resolution: 2560x1600
VGA
Max resolution: 2048x1536
If Apple wanted seeing as AMD Crossfire is an option they could put 2 7770M chips on-board to push through their Thunderbolt Output.
Quote:
As of January 2012, the latest HD 7000 series graphics cards - along with a dual-link DVI connector and a HDMI connector - feature support for two Mini DisplayPorts 1.2, allowing daisy-chaining up to six monitors, up to 4096x2160 (4K resolution) or 2560x1600p60 Stereoscopic 3D per display and high bit-rate audio from the same connector, optionally behaving like a single large display. A DisplayPort hub containing three dual-link DVI connectors is also available.
HiDPI doesn't mean an automatic doubling of Pixels on a display. With each 7770M putting out 55W TDP having a mere 110W TDP supporting HiDPI that Apple depicts for upcoming Displays they sell which don't need to be this mythical 5120x2880 display will invariably drive Panel ppi for large screens forward and people readdressing the meaning of Retina and having to be reminded the difference between a 3.5" screen to a 10" screen to a 27" screen.
The point i'm making is instead of having some super high-res screen as standard I'd rather have an SSD & more RAM standard. Say the current screens cost $200 and the newer screens cost $400, I'd rather apple take the $200 keep the original screens now and throw that towards an SSD in place of a stand HDD.
Quote:
Originally Posted by AandcMedia
The point i'm making is instead of having some super high-res screen as standard I'd rather have an SSD & more RAM standard. Say the current screens cost $200 and the newer screens cost $400, I'd rather apple take the $200 keep the original screens now and throw that towards an SSD in place of a stand HDD.
Point taken, but they're not gonna give us more RAM or an SSD standard. Sure, we could see 4GB in the 11" and 13" MacBook, but I don't think we'll see 8GB standard in anything but the 17" MacBook, and even that's pushing it.