New Power Macs Have Crippled DDR Memory?
eggboard writes "According to Rob Art Morgan, who has tested this, the new Power Macs from Apple that use DDR (double data rate) memory -- like the Xserve rank-mount unit -- cannot access the memory any faster than the cheaper and slower SDRAM found in the previous system arch. A controller limits the data rate to 1 GB/s, while DDR could work more than twice as fast. Unfortunately, this makes mincemeat of the architecture, as it bus-/memory-bounds 2D and 3D graphics and rendering."
You haven't the slightest idea what you're talking about, do you?
Motorola makes the CPU. Motorola makes CPUs that don't support DDR access to memory.
Apple makes the motherboards. Apple implements DDR memory everywhere except in the CPU.
IBM just announced vector computing support in the Power4. Vector computing is a big part of Apple's strategy, and until recently it was only available from Motorola.
The new Power Macs have a heat dissipation mechanism that's capable of dealing with many times the heat load of the currently shipping systems. They added this feature despite the fact that the previous generation of Power Macs had no particular heat problems.
Can't you read the writing on the wall? Apple has designed this new Power Mac to accept new, faster processors, and lots of 'em. A four-processor system is not unreasonable given the amount of space and heat dissipation inside this new chassis. Six or eight processors might even be possible, if everything comes together just right.
Don't assume you have the first idea what Apple has planned until you get all the facts.