"get it while supplies last"...so that we can upgrade the OS and make the hardware obsolete within a year!
I would guess that all the Macs that are limited by the heat generated from Intel processors will discontinued.
I have not heard anything from Caldera about M1 compatibility yet. Not a concern right now...still running intel mac pro's here & I know Caldera won't phase out support for them for a long time.
Thats good...looks like they caught up with Apple then. Im not going to any different processors anytime soon...sticking with my Intel workhorses here. 10% speed increase....sounds good to me!
Regarding Macs being rendered obsolete by OS upgrades... quite the contrary.
I have an older cheese grater hooked up to two large monitors that I can't put any adobe past 2017 on. My intern would rather use his 13 or 15" mac book with the most recent version. I have a 2 year old iMac and a PC for out put.Regarding Macs being rendered obsolete by OS upgrades... quite the contrary. I am running a 2013 Imac with the previous OS Catalina. I've seen absolutely no slowdowns since new. I did not expect to own it this long nor did I think it would keep up with newer operating systems. Big sur is the latest Mac OS but my Imac is not supported. Not bad for an 8 year old computer. Every OS update has been troublefree.
I only update my OS to keep up with Adobe CC software. It tends to require the newer OS's in order to work
I will be watching for the new M1 iMacs whenever they come out and look for a replacement
You should probably retire that 3950 and install an 11th gen. Intel Core i9-11980HK. That will really jump start Chrome, and what it will do with Outlook is amazing, especially when coupled with 319 Tbps internet speed (unfortunately, only available in Japan at this time).Ill stick with my Ryzen 3950x 16 core with 64gig ram, runs chrome just fast enough to get on the forums, oh and 5 gig illustrator files sometimes. Although some of my cutting computers are about 10 years old still going strong, due to never being updated or connected to the internet I think
You mean a 11900K?You should probably retire that 3950 and install an 11th gen. Intel Core i9-11980HK. That will really jump start Chrome, and what it will do with Outlook is amazing, especially when coupled with 319 Tbps internet speed (unfortunately, only available in Japan at this time).
The downside is you will likely melt the cutting blade on your plotter.
Im 99% sure it was a joke. but 11980HK is a laptop chip. Kind of an odd poke.I think that comment was a joke (or hope it was)... the 11900 range is ~35-50% slower than a 3950X
I actually don't know how long that is truly going to be. Writing is on the wall and they don't really want all that many options and compared to what is available for the other main 2 desktop OSs, don't really have as much options at that.I would rather pay the extra for a Mac Pro. As it’s fully upgradable from storage, ram, graphics card and CPU.
Apart from the "trash can" the Mac Pros have always been upgradable.I actually don't know how long that is truly going to be. Writing is on the wall and they don't really want all that many options and compared to what is available for the other main 2 desktop OSs, don't really have as much options at that.
Plus Apple is really pushing for end users not to be able to upgrade after the sale. Cost between upgraded on Apple is certainly higher then the cost per the equivalent to the other 2 OSs and sometimes one can't get as powerful of an upgrade compared to the OSs if you were to do it as apart of the original sale. I should clarify that it isn't cost in of itself, it's cost compared to what I perceive to be the value that I am getting for said cost. I've got some peripherals that cost more then the Apple version (even though Apple doesn't sell a true 1:1 version), but for me, it's a much higher value. Now, may be able to tinker post sale and get some things cheaper, but still those OEMs aren't going to have the same options compared to what is available that can be used for the other desktop OSs.
And yes, there have been a time or two when Apple has forced updates. Especially when they had the su/sudo issues when a previous update broke those (the time that really comes to mind was during the release of a new OS version). Now, one may argue that those were necessary (and big time bugs like that, I would as well), but they can and they have forced updates (but at least they didn't force feature updates (that I am aware of)). Now, is it as much as Windows, especially with Win 10 and I would imagine Win 11(and there are quite a few things that I don't like about Win 11) being even more so, not even close, but make no mistake, they can and they have and there is really nothing stopping them from doing it. Considering both are locking down their systems more and more.
Plus there are hardware "accessories" that they have that are sold as "security" features, but I'm not all that fond of and for one, there is no upgraded if it goes bad. If it goes bye bye, time for a new rig (goes in part with locking down the system).
Apart from the "trash can" the Mac Pros have always been upgradable.
I'm going to catch flack for this, but a lot more of Apple is that marketing gimmick then it used to be. It has become more of a fashion accessory then anything else now. That is my own opinion and it is from someone that has dealt with all 3 desktop OSs and dealt extensively with the 3 Unix-like OSs on mobile as well. Macs (Windows too) aren't what they used to be back in the heyday of desktop usage. Even Windows had more power to the user back in the 9x days compared to now (not talking necessarily raw computing power like processor and ram etc, but options and abilities with the end user, but audio actually was handled better back then on Windows then now, but I digress).Back then, "Pro" use to mean "pro" and not a marketing gimmick. But it has seemed to stick with the Mac Pro. Only thing i'd be concerned about is if they do the M1/M2 chip in the next pro.