dypinc said:
The new Mac Pro tower is not designed for the mainstream Mac customer base. It is obviously a business tool for those that need this kind of horsepower. I looked at similar priced hardware designed to run Window or Linux and didn't find much difference in price.
The difference with configuring a professional workstation tower from HP, Dell and other vendors of that sort is the price balloons up based on the CPUs, graphics boards, ECC RAM and other stuff
that goes inside the case. The price isn't inflated based on the styling of its outside or the freaking stand that hold a computer monitor! What is Apple going to start doing next? Inlaying diamonds and gold into the Apple logo? It's as if they're selling piece of fashion wear or jewelry rather than tools to get work done.
dypinc said:
Sure I can build a cheaper computer, but that hassle of trying to make a hackintos out of it is not worth the hassle for an everyday production machine. One also needs to consider the cost of maintain or the slowdown in workflow of a troublesome OS, and there is just not enough production software available for Linux at this point.
Again, at the very high end levels of performance computing there are very specific market niches that are being served. Take motion picture visual effects for instance. That market is very dominated by Windows and Linux based setups. There are various reasons why,
including Apple abandoning desktop tower products in favor of iMacs and notebooks several years ago. The most powerful graphics boards in existence do not run on Mac hardware. Windows and Linux were dominating the visual effects space well before Apple got on its fixation with iMacs. A bunch of that had to do with a greater amount of industry specific software available
as well as more freedom to develop custom software.
Regarding the supposed reliability of OSX, that OS is not immune from having bugs. The OS is not immune from breaking other applications with half-baked updates either. Plus it's not immune from hacking either. It's not hard to find complaints in Adobe's user forums about an update of OSX causing issues with specific applications. The same is true at Corel's forums for the Mac version of CorelDRAW 2019.
I do own an iPad Pro, but I personally have zero use for a Mac-based system in my workplace since none of the sign industry specific software we use (Flexi, Onyx Thrive, Rasterlink Pro, EnRoute, etc) runs natively on OSX. That stuff runs only on Windows. Adobe's stuff run great on a Mac. CorelDRAW, at least in its current release, doesn't do so well.