TS drops the boom. Dual 2.6 tomorrow

1356789

Comments

  • Reply 41 of 163
    charlesscharless Posts: 301member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by iDave

    Gosh, some of you folks are mighty talented. I have enough trouble using one program at a time. An idle program in the background has little need for dual processors.



    Do you ever use a multi-threaded app? That will benefit from multiprocessing even if you manage to kill the Finder, lookupd, diskarbitrationd, coreservicesd, and all the other daemons that are always running in the background.



    Basically any app that can do a task without beachballing is multithreaded.
  • Reply 42 of 163
    seanlseanl Posts: 39member
    Ok, here's something...



    Apple Brazil is now running a G5 tower ad on the front page instead of the Airport Express ad.
  • Reply 43 of 163
    bigcbigc Posts: 1,224member
    doesn't anyone else upload stuff at 60KB/s download at a 100 and move 20GB around different drives at the same time...try that with a single processor for fun



  • Reply 44 of 163
    mactivomactivo Posts: 2member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Bigc

    doesn't anyone else upload stuff at 60KB/s download at a 100 and move 20GB around different drives at the same time...try that with a single processor for fun







    In no way do I support the idea that MP machines do not provide significant value, but the fact is, not everyone takes/needs all of the power two processors provides. We have several Dual G5s at the office and I monitor performance from time to time. Even our well used machines spend most of the day with both processors below 50%. That said, I wouldn't be buying the machines if I thought the second processor didn't provide a significant performance increase. But why are we even talking about this? The bottom line is everyone will be excited if Apple actually delivers faster machines tomorrow.
  • Reply 45 of 163
    costiquecostique Posts: 1,084member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by mactivo

    But why are we even talking about this? The bottom line is everyone will be excited if Apple actually delivers faster machines tomorrow.



    Heh, a 600MHz speed bump opens the way for a G5 iMac, which too many of us have been bitching about for a year.
  • Reply 46 of 163
    gnomgnom Posts: 85member
    oh well, 2,6GHz is not that bad, I just somehow fell in love with the PPC975/PCIexpress idea. As it looks now we can bury that until at least MWSF.

    Anyway I know I will get myself one of those beasts today, I've waited long enough.





    cheers.
  • Reply 47 of 163
    ensign pulverensign pulver Posts: 1,193member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by GnOm

    oh well, 2,6GHz is not that bad, I just somehow fell in love with the PPC975/PCIexpress idea. As it looks now we can bury that until at least MWSF.



    Yes, this sadly looks to be the case.



    I'll wait to see some reviews on how Motion runs on a G5 iMac. If it's decent I'll get that as a stop gap, otherwise it looks like next January.
  • Reply 48 of 163
    msanttimsantti Posts: 1,377member
    Well, its almost 7:30am and the Apple Store (US) is still up.



    Looks like no PM's this week.
  • Reply 49 of 163
    mac voyermac voyer Posts: 1,294member
    Thank you all for the history lesson. I was not aware of Apple's history with dual processors before the G4 debacle. If you begin you knowledge of duals with the G4 500 as I did, then it is hard not to come to the conclusion that I did. I am still confused about Apple's motives. Why did they only go all dual when they seemed to hit a snag? When the G5 was introduced, why did they only release one model with a dual CPU? Why did they only add the second model by force rather than by design? It made it look like they were only using duals to compete on the high end and bragging rights, not for the good of the platform. Perhaps someone can shed some light on what they may have been/be thinking.
  • Reply 50 of 163
    playmakerplaymaker Posts: 511member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by MarcUK

    Talking about Quad systems, I recently saw the price of a 4CPU opteron board, it was £1500, and about £1200 for each opteron 850(2.4ghz) or £700 for an 842(1.6ghz). Therefore the entry price of the 4CPU PC market is around £6000 (or $8000), if Apple could do this for £3000, or $4500, I think they would have a winner. And a Xeon MP (for 4 way boxes is about £2500 ($4000) at 1.5ghz.



    Has anyone checked the newest seeds of OSX to see if it is compiled for more than 2 CPU?




    $3000 I wish this were true but I dont think so.
  • Reply 51 of 163
    aaronsaarons Posts: 31member
    Did anyone else notice that TS revised their article to reflect newer (slower) processor speeds?



    Didn't it use to say 2.6, 2.4, and 2.2, all Dual?



    Now it says 2.6 OR 2.5 for the high end, then Dual 2, dual 1.8, and an entry single 1.8...



    as
  • Reply 52 of 163
    idaveidave Posts: 1,283member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Mac Voyer

    When the G5 was introduced, why did they only release one model with a dual CPU? Why did they only add the second model by force rather than by design? It made it look like they were only using duals to compete on the high end and bragging rights, not for the good of the platform. Perhaps someone can shed some light on what they may have been/be thinking.



    I think it was a shortage of processors that forced their hand. After discovering that the dual 2.0 was the hot selling model they had to upgrade the 1.8 to duals to take the pressure off the high end. That was my take on it anyway. Kinda like SUVs, people were buying the big powerful beasts, not because they needed them but because they were there, and anything else seemed lackluster.
  • Reply 53 of 163
    derrick 61derrick 61 Posts: 178member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Playmaker

    $3000 I wish this were true but I dont think so.



    He didn't say $ 3000, he said £ 3000. That's a big difference!
  • Reply 54 of 163
    existenceexistence Posts: 991member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by AaronS

    Did anyone else notice that TS revised their article to reflect newer (slower) processor speeds?



    Didn't it use to say 2.6, 2.4, and 2.2, all Dual?



    Now it says 2.6 OR 2.5 for the high end, then Dual 2, dual 1.8, and an entry single 1.8...



    as




    If that's true this update is going to suck and is probably only an interim update until 3GHz G5's come in September. No wonder Steve didn't want to introduce these at WWDC.
  • Reply 55 of 163
    rhumgodrhumgod Posts: 1,289member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Existence

    If that's true this update is going to suck and is probably only an interim update until 3GHz G5's come in September. No wonder Steve didn't want to introduce these at WWDC.



    A 25% increase in speed is not all that bad; granted it's not the 3GHz everyone was expecting, but they still have until September, kinda, sorta officially to hit that mark.
  • Reply 56 of 163
    pscatespscates Posts: 5,847member
    Quote:

    If that's true this update is going to suck and is probably only an interim update until 3GHz G5's come in September. No wonder Steve didn't want to introduce these at WWDC.







    Yes, that dual 2.6 will never cut it...piece of shit. It's only when you tack on that extra 400MHz and hit 3GHz that the products start to really mean something!



    \



    I've been nice, but I'm starting to lose my grip with some of you...



  • Reply 57 of 163
    rhumgodrhumgod Posts: 1,289member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by pscates

    I've been nice, but I'm starting to lose my grip with some of you...



    A good thing AI doesn't allow guns....
  • Reply 58 of 163
    pscatespscates Posts: 5,847member
    Gee, I'm kinda wishing they would...
  • Reply 59 of 163
    existenceexistence Posts: 991member
    Are you kidding? The prices on these "new" G5 machines are going to suck. One whole year and is this the best they can do? A $1299 single G5 1.6GHz is not going to sell. DO you have any idea what kind of PC can be had for $1299?



    At least when Intel stagnates, it cuts prices on its crap significantly. Last year a 3.2GHz P4C was about ~$700, now it's $250.
  • Reply 60 of 163
    Quote:

    Originally posted by pscates





    Yes, that dual 2.6 will never cut it...piece of shit. It's only when you tack on that extra 400MHz and hit 3GHz that the products start to really mean something!



    \



    I've been nice, but I'm starting to lose my grip with some of you...







    Hello? You have totally missed the point. Not everyone can afford the top model and if the other two models are 1.8 Ghz and 2.0 Ghz (same as we already have) then what the hell is the point? One model faster than before after a full year of nothing? A 200 Mhz increase on the bottom two models after a full year of nothing? We have every right to wonder what the hell is going on.
Sign In or Register to comment.