TSMC's 3nm chips won't be ready in time for 2022 MacBook Pros, Kuo says

Posted:
in General Discussion
Well-connected analyst Ming-Chi Kuo is doubling down on his forecast that Apple's upcoming MacBook Pro and iPad Pro models won't sport processors built on a 3nm chipmaking process.

14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros
14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros


In a tweet on Friday, Kuo reiterated his prediction that upcoming 14-inch MacBook Pro and 16-inch MacBook Pro models would sport new chips based on TSMC's existing 5nm production process. That runs counter to other reports suggesting that the models would have 3nm chips.

According to Kuo, components must be purchased by October at the latest for products will enter mass production in the fourth quarter of 2022. He says that TSMC's 3nm chips won't be available until January 2023 at the earliest.

As far as evidence backing up his claim, the analyst says that TSMC's 3nm chip production cycle is about "4 months." So, despite the fact that TSMC is kicking off mass production of 3nm chips in September, they won't be ready to ship until January.

In a tweet from earlier in August, Kuo also noted that TSMC's own financial guidance only includes contributions from 3nm chips starting in the first quarter of 2023.

Kuo's prediction here runs counter to other reports from the likes of DigiTimes and other publications.

However, some reports, such as a piece in the Commercial Times, don't outline a specific start date for 3nm chips. Earlier in August, the Commercial Times said that Apple would be the first company to get its hands on 3nm chips, and that production of 3nm chips would start in September. Both of those claims can still line up with Kuo's forecast.

Apple is rumored to be working on new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models for release in the second half of 2022. Those models are expected to be incremental upgrades with updated "M2 Pro" and "M2 Pro Max" processors.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 14
    netroxnetrox Posts: 1,418member
    But given the history of processes, a new process tends to happen every two to three generations so it's nothing remarkable. It would be remarkable if they manage to deliver 3nm just a generation later.

    Apple could just delay the release of M2 Pro/Max.

    But again, I can envision M2 Ultra using 3nm which would allow Apple to position it as a power workstation that makes a huge difference. 
  • Reply 2 of 14
    What if apple doesn’t release its MacBooks until spring, that would give it time mass manufacture m2 pro, max, ultra, extreme on 3nm with an updated core design, and unleash the power of 3nm on the world. I’m patiently waiting for a Mac mini based on 3nm, and finally after all these years, retire hackintosh. 
    edited August 2022
  • Reply 3 of 14
    hypoluxahypoluxa Posts: 694member
    What if apple doesn’t release its MacBooks until spring, that would give it time mass manufacture m2 pro, max, ultra, extreme on 3nm with an updated core design, and unleash the power of 3nm on the world. I’m patiently waiting for a Mac mini based on 3nm, and finally after all these years, retire hackintosh. 

    I would imagine that's what they would like to do (wait for 3nm for the Pro/Max/Ultra... versions). I am wondering though if they will make their projected 2 yr transition window with the MacPro and high end Mini before the end of this calendar yr. Or if they will just say "sod it" lets wait for the 3nm to be ready for those too.
  • Reply 4 of 14
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,699member
    Not according to this report

    https://ctee.com.tw/news/tech/702617.html
  • Reply 5 of 14
    Delay for 3nm seems the logical choice if kuo is accurate. Apple could also announce first, then sell, but that doesn’t have the same sales impact as “hype, hype, hype… and by the way you can buy it today!” 

    I won’t mind a delay. Been waiting to get past the gen 1 m series and replace my 2016 MBP 15”. 


    edited August 2022
  • Reply 6 of 14
    eriamjheriamjh Posts: 1,642member
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?

    badmonk
  • Reply 7 of 14
    y2any2an Posts: 187member
    Even if the 3nm process was ready, Apple wouldn’t jump to it. They take measured steps to have something for the next product iteration, and to hold to the margins they currently get from the (cheaper!) 5nm process. The only reason they would jump is competitive pressure, and no-one else is close. 
    muthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 8 of 14
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,320moderator
    eriamjh said:
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?
    If they use N5P and not N3, we can probably assume 40% improvement over N5 in the GPU, N3 would be 70% or more. Current Ultra is 21TFLOPs. If the Mac Pro is double the Ultra and then 40% higher, that's nearly 60TFLOPs.

    This is around the same as the highest 2019 Mac Pro. The highest performance Mac Studio is $5k. Doubling the chip would be under $10k, likely somewhere around $8-9k and would match a $24k 2019 Mac Pro for standard tasks and outperform it for video encoding.

    NVidia will be launching the 4090 GPUs in September and this is rumored to be as high as 80TFLOPs. People will be able to fit two in a standard PC so 160TFLOPs of computer power.

    I think 60TFLOPs would be enough for a Mac Pro launch and would sit between a 3090 and 4090 and it would be a small form factor chassis.

    If the manufacturing cycle takes 3-4 months and starts in September, it makes more sense to use N5P because they can do an N3 refresh in October 2023.
  • Reply 9 of 14
    thttht Posts: 5,437member
    Marvin said:
    eriamjh said:
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?
    If they use N5P and not N3, we can probably assume 40% improvement over N5 in the GPU, N3 would be 70% or more. Current Ultra is 21TFLOPs. If the Mac Pro is double the Ultra and then 40% higher, that's nearly 60TFLOPs.

    This is around the same as the highest 2019 Mac Pro. The highest performance Mac Studio is $5k. Doubling the chip would be under $10k, likely somewhere around $8-9k and would match a $24k 2019 Mac Pro for standard tasks and outperform it for video encoding.

    NVidia will be launching the 4090 GPUs in September and this is rumored to be as high as 80TFLOPs. People will be able to fit two in a standard PC so 160TFLOPs of computer power.

    I think 60TFLOPs would be enough for a Mac Pro launch and would sit between a 3090 and 4090 and it would be a small form factor chassis.

    If the manufacturing cycle takes 3-4 months and starts in September, it makes more sense to use N5P because they can do an N3 refresh in October 2023.
    The fab process isn't what is holding Apple back from shipping a Mac Pro. They know what Mac Pro customers want or what the least worst option is: a 2019 Mac Pro with Apple Silicon. I think a lot of 2019 Mac Pro customers would have upgraded if a Mac Pro had an M1 Ultra, 8 PCIe slots, and however they do it, MPX modules with Apple Silicon that could expand the CPU, GPU and ML performance. If it was just an M1 Ultra in a MPX module, they could put 3 to 4 M1 Ultras into a Mac Pro for 50 to 80 TFLOPS of GPU compute.

    I don't think there is much trust in the Mac Pro customer base for Apple. It's been 9 years since the 2013 Mac Pro. Apple's commitment to this set of customers is weird. I really don't get it as it can't be really that hard. It's basically to the point that whoever or whatever process that drives these decisions needs to be demolished, and they need to start over, again. It is likely a function of money as the Mac Pro seems more of a branding project, than a product line that tries to meet the needs of its market, so they leave it untouched for years-on-end.

    I would hazard a guess that not many people will be putting 2 4090 GPUs in a box. The power consumption is rumored to be 400 to 500 Watts, and the Ti card could by 800. There is basically a "limit" at 1800 W. With next gen x86 desktop CPUs hitting 300 W, putting a high end CPU and 2 GPUs sounds pretty close to needing a dedicated circuit for one computer in your house. It's only the server GPU compute workflows that can drive sales of such a card. With crypto crashing and driving down the need for useless computations, perhaps the power usage in GPU cards will finally fall back to levels that aren't the equivalent of running a hair dryer in your room for a few hours. Hmm... have to think about selling my NVDA stock, but server-grade GPU compute is an increasing market.
    entropys
  • Reply 10 of 14
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,163member
    y2an said:
    Even if the 3nm process was ready, Apple wouldn’t jump to it. They take measured steps to have something for the next product iteration, and to hold to the margins they currently get from the (cheaper!) 5nm process. The only reason they would jump is competitive pressure, and no-one else is close. 
    Exactly. A profit seeking entity will only do the upgrades it needs to (not all bad, a government owned outfit designing chips wouldn’t even have these choices on the radar). Apple only needs to compete with Intel and AMD on performance. It doesn’t need to beat itself.

    M2 only needs to be 5nm as it is close to 20% performance improvement over M1 (assuming core counts remain the same proportions in pro and ultra). A more orderly progression leaves a lot more options for the M3 in the next upgrade cycle to beat whatever Intel and amd come up with.

    What is left of real interest in M2 world  is what Apple does with the Mac Pro. Tht’s makes good points above, but for the Mac Pro at least the emphasis on power management in the SOC should not need to apply. And should it be a SOC? And we are only hearing crickets.
    edited August 2022
  • Reply 11 of 14
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,320moderator
    tht said:
    Marvin said:
    eriamjh said:
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?
    If they use N5P and not N3, we can probably assume 40% improvement over N5 in the GPU, N3 would be 70% or more. Current Ultra is 21TFLOPs. If the Mac Pro is double the Ultra and then 40% higher, that's nearly 60TFLOPs.

    This is around the same as the highest 2019 Mac Pro. The highest performance Mac Studio is $5k. Doubling the chip would be under $10k, likely somewhere around $8-9k and would match a $24k 2019 Mac Pro for standard tasks and outperform it for video encoding.

    NVidia will be launching the 4090 GPUs in September and this is rumored to be as high as 80TFLOPs. People will be able to fit two in a standard PC so 160TFLOPs of computer power.

    I think 60TFLOPs would be enough for a Mac Pro launch and would sit between a 3090 and 4090 and it would be a small form factor chassis.

    If the manufacturing cycle takes 3-4 months and starts in September, it makes more sense to use N5P because they can do an N3 refresh in October 2023.
    The fab process isn't what is holding Apple back from shipping a Mac Pro. They know what Mac Pro customers want or what the least worst option is: a 2019 Mac Pro with Apple Silicon. I think a lot of 2019 Mac Pro customers would have upgraded if a Mac Pro had an M1 Ultra, 8 PCIe slots, and however they do it, MPX modules with Apple Silicon that could expand the CPU, GPU and ML performance. If it was just an M1 Ultra in a MPX module, they could put 3 to 4 M1 Ultras into a Mac Pro for 50 to 80 TFLOPS of GPU compute.

    I don't think there is much trust in the Mac Pro customer base for Apple. It's been 9 years since the 2013 Mac Pro. Apple's commitment to this set of customers is weird. I really don't get it as it can't be really that hard. It's basically to the point that whoever or whatever process that drives these decisions needs to be demolished, and they need to start over, again. It is likely a function of money as the Mac Pro seems more of a branding project, than a product line that tries to meet the needs of its market, so they leave it untouched for years-on-end.
    They mentioned before that most Mac Pro buyers go for the mid-range options and the MPX modules are only useful to very specific workflows. The most common use for PCIe will be optical networking.

    It's always assumed that the latest Mac Pro or iMac Pro design is the one that works best for the target market because it hasn't been discontinued yet. Only Apple knows what unit volume they sell and which models. After the Mac Studio launch, I could see a lot of the towers being swapped out, especially for things like audio production.

    It is hard to make a one-size-fits-all model for high-end use cases because the needs are varied. Audio production, VFX, film editing, scientific computation have different requirements. There's even software developers who buy these machines. A Unity developer here describes why they went for the 2013 model:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAZ16_rpcsg

    Reusing the 2019 chassis directly isn't a good option, it needs a redesign for M2. Maintaining MPX module support would make people who invested in them happy but I doubt they'd bother with external GPU support. This would mean they'd have to commit to driver support for GPUs that would be used by a fraction of 1% of the Mac userbase and it doesn't seem necessary. They could easily make an external MPX box for the few that need them, maybe have a company like Sonnet make it and plug it into the Mac Pro via PCIe. Most other users would plug in an optical IO card for use in a networked environment and not need any other slots.
    tht said:
    Marvin said:
    eriamjh said:
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?
    If they use N5P and not N3, we can probably assume 40% improvement over N5 in the GPU, N3 would be 70% or more. Current Ultra is 21TFLOPs. If the Mac Pro is double the Ultra and then 40% higher, that's nearly 60TFLOPs.

    This is around the same as the highest 2019 Mac Pro. The highest performance Mac Studio is $5k. Doubling the chip would be under $10k, likely somewhere around $8-9k and would match a $24k 2019 Mac Pro for standard tasks and outperform it for video encoding.

    NVidia will be launching the 4090 GPUs in September and this is rumored to be as high as 80TFLOPs. People will be able to fit two in a standard PC so 160TFLOPs of computer power.

    I think 60TFLOPs would be enough for a Mac Pro launch and would sit between a 3090 and 4090 and it would be a small form factor chassis.

    If the manufacturing cycle takes 3-4 months and starts in September, it makes more sense to use N5P because they can do an N3 refresh in October 2023.
    I would hazard a guess that not many people will be putting 2 4090 GPUs in a box. The power consumption is rumored to be 400 to 500 Watts, and the Ti card could by 800. There is basically a "limit" at 1800 W. With next gen x86 desktop CPUs hitting 300 W, putting a high end CPU and 2 GPUs sounds pretty close to needing a dedicated circuit for one computer in your house. It's only the server GPU compute workflows that can drive sales of such a card. With crypto crashing and driving down the need for useless computations, perhaps the power usage in GPU cards will finally fall back to levels that aren't the equivalent of running a hair dryer in your room for a few hours. Hmm... have to think about selling my NVDA stock, but server-grade GPU compute is an increasing market.
    I think most people will use a single GPU too and 60TFLOPs dual Ultra M2 would be suitable for higher-end use cases. A 3090 is already very powerful for compute tasks:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3UUkNxIdlU

    It will be interesting to see what route they go with the Mac Pro. Building a 4-way UltraFusion for such a small portion of the Mac userbase seems excessive. M2 Ultra MPX modules might work but still feels over-engineered. I reckon 2 Ultras with a lower bandwidth interconnect would be the easiest way and they'd offer 128GB or 256GB models. It will be hard to differentiate the entry Mac Pro from the top Mac Studio.
  • Reply 12 of 14
    thttht Posts: 5,437member
    Marvin said:
    tht said:
    Marvin said:
    eriamjh said:
    Hmmm.  For the Mac Pro?
    If they use N5P and not N3, we can probably assume 40% improvement over N5 in the GPU, N3 would be 70% or more. Current Ultra is 21TFLOPs. If the Mac Pro is double the Ultra and then 40% higher, that's nearly 60TFLOPs.

    This is around the same as the highest 2019 Mac Pro. The highest performance Mac Studio is $5k. Doubling the chip would be under $10k, likely somewhere around $8-9k and would match a $24k 2019 Mac Pro for standard tasks and outperform it for video encoding.

    NVidia will be launching the 4090 GPUs in September and this is rumored to be as high as 80TFLOPs. People will be able to fit two in a standard PC so 160TFLOPs of computer power.

    I think 60TFLOPs would be enough for a Mac Pro launch and would sit between a 3090 and 4090 and it would be a small form factor chassis.

    If the manufacturing cycle takes 3-4 months and starts in September, it makes more sense to use N5P because they can do an N3 refresh in October 2023.
    The fab process isn't what is holding Apple back from shipping a Mac Pro. They know what Mac Pro customers want or what the least worst option is: a 2019 Mac Pro with Apple Silicon. I think a lot of 2019 Mac Pro customers would have upgraded if a Mac Pro had an M1 Ultra, 8 PCIe slots, and however they do it, MPX modules with Apple Silicon that could expand the CPU, GPU and ML performance. If it was just an M1 Ultra in a MPX module, they could put 3 to 4 M1 Ultras into a Mac Pro for 50 to 80 TFLOPS of GPU compute.

    I don't think there is much trust in the Mac Pro customer base for Apple. It's been 9 years since the 2013 Mac Pro. Apple's commitment to this set of customers is weird. I really don't get it as it can't be really that hard. It's basically to the point that whoever or whatever process that drives these decisions needs to be demolished, and they need to start over, again. It is likely a function of money as the Mac Pro seems more of a branding project, than a product line that tries to meet the needs of its market, so they leave it untouched for years-on-end.
    They mentioned before that most Mac Pro buyers go for the mid-range options and the MPX modules are only useful to very specific workflows. The most common use for PCIe will be optical networking.

    It's always assumed that the latest Mac Pro or iMac Pro design is the one that works best for the target market because it hasn't been discontinued yet. Only Apple knows what unit volume they sell and which models. After the Mac Studio launch, I could see a lot of the towers being swapped out, especially for things like audio production.

    It is hard to make a one-size-fits-all model for high-end use cases because the needs are varied. Audio production, VFX, film editing, scientific computation have different requirements. There's even software developers who buy these machines. A Unity developer here describes why they went for the 2013 model:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAZ16_rpcsg

    Reusing the 2019 chassis directly isn't a good option, it needs a redesign for M2. Maintaining MPX module support would make people who invested in them happy but I doubt they'd bother with external GPU support. This would mean they'd have to commit to driver support for GPUs that would be used by a fraction of 1% of the Mac userbase and it doesn't seem necessary. They could easily make an external MPX box for the few that need them, maybe have a company like Sonnet make it and plug it into the Mac Pro via PCIe. Most other users would plug in an optical IO card for use in a networked environment and not need any other slots.
    ...
    I think most people will use a single GPU too and 60TFLOPs dual Ultra M2 would be suitable for higher-end use cases. A 3090 is already very powerful for compute tasks:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3UUkNxIdlU

    It will be interesting to see what route they go with the Mac Pro. Building a 4-way UltraFusion for such a small portion of the Mac userbase seems excessive. M2 Ultra MPX modules might work but still feels over-engineered. I reckon 2 Ultras with a lower bandwidth interconnect would be the easiest way and they'd offer 128GB or 256GB models. It will be hard to differentiate the entry Mac Pro from the top Mac Studio.
    I think the 2013 Mac Pro video only speaks to how poorly Apple has addressed the desktop and workstation market. The game developer wanted a 64 GB RAM desktop Mac for less than $1000. Apple has segmented its desktop line such that it is really not possible to get 64 GB RAM in a Mac without spending over $2400 on new Mac Studio with M1 Max and 64 GB of RAM or a used Mac Pro, iMac Pro, iMac 5K or Intel Mac Mini that has dropped below $1000, with only the Intel Mac mini being able to maybe hit that price point used. The 2013 Mac Pro offers more performance than the Intel Mac mini. All the other 2017 vintage "Pro" machines or younger won't have dropped in price.

    I know we try to think like Apple product marketing would think - designing a machine for bulk use case in a niche - and it could be successful if Apple actually updated the machines. They haven't demonstrated any commitment. They didn't update the 2013 Mac Pro, 2017 iMac Pro and 2019 Mac Pro. They didn't have to go through this churn if they actually updated the machines. If the 2013 model was actually updated, it could have been successful. These restarts really don't help. 

    So, I definitely think the least worst path for them today is to continue to use the 2019 Mac Pro case, keep the 8 PCIe slots, with Apple Silicon. They should offer their own GPU card for people who want more. It could just be an M1 Max or an M1 Ultra in a clustered network mode, or perhaps they develop memory protocols to unify all the memory on the boot-up SoC and the SoCs in the cards. If customers want something that is cheaper than $6000, there is a lot of room below that to offer a model. Say, a M2 Max model for $3000. After 3 or 4 years, a lot of these models will become viable in the $1000 second hand market.
  • Reply 13 of 14
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,320moderator
    tht said:
    I think the 2013 Mac Pro video only speaks to how poorly Apple has addressed the desktop and workstation market. The game developer wanted a 64 GB RAM desktop Mac for less than $1000. Apple has segmented its desktop line such that it is really not possible to get 64 GB RAM in a Mac without spending over $2400 on new Mac Studio with M1 Max and 64 GB of RAM or a used Mac Pro, iMac Pro, iMac 5K or Intel Mac Mini that has dropped below $1000, with only the Intel Mac mini being able to maybe hit that price point used.
    For a high-end product that people only need to replace every 5-10 years, $2400 is a decent price point.
    tht said:
    I know we try to think like Apple product marketing would think - designing a machine for bulk use case in a niche - and it could be successful if Apple actually updated the machines. They haven't demonstrated any commitment. They didn't update the 2013 Mac Pro, 2017 iMac Pro and 2019 Mac Pro. They didn't have to go through this churn if they actually updated the machines. If the 2013 model was actually updated, it could have been successful. These restarts really don't help.
    Companies like HP update their desktops and workstations frequently and they give a good indication of the industry trend.

    https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0000047217/0302cd18-964e-4bee-b427-d313202a7dd9.pdf



    Desktops and workstations are trending down, laptops are trending up. HP is one of the biggest workstation manufacturers in the world and their annual revenue was $1.6b. Apple's Mac revenue last year was $35b.

    There's nothing Apple can do to make a financial success in a dying market. The best they can do is to make the target audience happy with the product and their products work for the majority of the target audience.

    Although they haven't updated the product lines directly, the models they released are suitable replacements. The 2017 iMac Pro was a suitable replacement for the 2013 Mac Pro and the Mac Studio is a suitable replacement for both of those. The Mac Studio is clearly the successor to the 2013 Mac Pro despite having a different name.
    tht said:
    So, I definitely think the least worst path for them today is to continue to use the 2019 Mac Pro case, keep the 8 PCIe slots, with Apple Silicon. They should offer their own GPU card for people who want more. It could just be an M1 Max or an M1 Ultra in a clustered network mode, or perhaps they develop memory protocols to unify all the memory on the boot-up SoC and the SoCs in the cards. If customers want something that is cheaper than $6000, there is a lot of room below that to offer a model. Say, a M2 Max model for $3000. After 3 or 4 years, a lot of these models will become viable in the $1000 second hand market.
    The industry is at a point where the spec isn't appealing in the same way. People aren't going to react to 100TFLOPs the same way they did to 10TFLOPs because significantly fewer people can make 100TFLOPs do something worthwhile. Faster is always better but it stops being meaningful when people don't feel that their workflows are slow.

    The next Mac Pro just has to have some versatility while offering a worthwhile performance upgrade. If it's over-engineered, they will lose money on it because the cost of setting up the manufacturing will outweigh the profit from the unit volume.
  • Reply 14 of 14
    thttht Posts: 5,437member
    Marvin said:
    tht said:
    I think the 2013 Mac Pro video only speaks to how poorly Apple has addressed the desktop and workstation market. The game developer wanted a 64 GB RAM desktop Mac for less than $1000. Apple has segmented its desktop line such that it is really not possible to get 64 GB RAM in a Mac without spending over $2400 on new Mac Studio with M1 Max and 64 GB of RAM or a used Mac Pro, iMac Pro, iMac 5K or Intel Mac Mini that has dropped below $1000, with only the Intel Mac mini being able to maybe hit that price point used.
    For a high-end product that people only need to replace every 5-10 years, $2400 is a decent price point.
    Yes. I truly hope Apple updates the Mac Studio on a 12 to 24 month cycle. They need to update it so that a second hand market of Mac Studios from about $500 to $1500 can exist in a few years. As said earlier, there aren't great options right now for people who want a $1000 Mac with lots of RAM and good graphics, where Apple's workstations (iMac Pro and 2019 Mac Pro) are north of $5000 when new.


    Marvin said:
    Companies like HP update their desktops and workstations frequently and they give a good indication of the industry trend.

    https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0000047217/0302cd18-964e-4bee-b427-d313202a7dd9.pdf



    Desktops and workstations are trending down, laptops are trending up. HP is one of the biggest workstation manufacturers in the world and their annual revenue was $1.6b. Apple's Mac revenue last year was $35b.

    There's nothing Apple can do to make a financial success in a dying market. The best they can do is to make the target audience happy with the product and their products work for the majority of the target audience.

    Although they haven't updated the product lines directly, the models they released are suitable replacements. The 2017 iMac Pro was a suitable replacement for the 2013 Mac Pro and the Mac Studio is a suitable replacement for both of those. The Mac Studio is clearly the successor to the 2013 Mac Pro despite having a different name.
    I wouldn't characterize the workstation market as dying per se. It's jobs and a desktop's jobs are being taken over by laptops and SFF desktops (Mac mini sized PCs), and units and revenue are going down, yes. This has been happening for the better part of 2 decades, but it will eventually settle out to some sustained level. Apple knows this. They also know they can't abandon it, otherwise that could have axed workstations some time over the past 10 years, and they did a major reset in 2017 that culminated in the 2019 Mac Pro.

    The software developed for use in workstations and servers, hardware too, trickle down to the premium and mainstream laptop level. It is what supports sales of Macbook Pros and Mac Studios. Without these workflows, sales of higher end Macs will diminish. These workflows are typically first developed using high end hardware like on a workstation. Performance in laptops will increase to the point that they will run these workflows well. The cycle continuously repeats because our problems and solution spaces are unending.

    Hence, I think Apple decided that have to do a Mac Pro rather than abandoning this market. We are not in disagreement much other than Apple taking a rather odd path to support this market niche. Too much boutique. Not enough updates. This applies to software too. Don't you find it strange that FCP users wrote an open letter to Apple to get its shit together regarding FCP? This is Apple's software that is a big driver for its high end hardware. The hardware offerings themselves has been complained about ad nauseum.

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