Slashdot Mirror


Apple Issues New G5 Benchmarks

rocketjam writes "According to an article in The Register, Apple has issued SPEC benchmarks for the new dual G5 2GHz machines, comparing it to a two-way Dell Xeon and a 3Ghz Pentium 4 machine. The article says the G5 lagged behind the Dells in integer performance, however in 'the parallel "rate" benchmarks, which tax both of the CPUs in the test machines, the G5 edged out the Xeon 17.2 to 16.7 in the integer score and 15.7 to 11.1 in the floating point tests, suggesting Apple makes far better use of its two CPUs than the Xeon machine....the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.'"

661 comments

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. auger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    what does auger mean in this context. I was thinking he meant to type favor but the keys aren't even remotely in the same place...

    1. Re:auger? by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 2, Informative
      what does auger mean in this context. I was thinking he meant to type favor but the keys aren't even remotely in the same place...

      Augury: divining the future be examining the entrails of dead birds, or somesuch, especially before a battle. (in ancient roman times)

      If sth 'augurs well', that means a favourable outcome is likely.

    2. Re:auger? by krysith · · Score: 5, Informative

      v. augur, augured, auguring, augurs

      1. To predict, especially from signs or omens; foretell. See Synonyms at foretell.

      Auger (your spelling) means a drill, or to drill.

    3. Re:auger? by Gorbie · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes...but what does auger mean in this context? We all know what augur means...we're geeks.

      And what do G5's have to do with boring holes in wood or ice, anyways? And how did we get onto snoblowers?

    4. Re:auger? by whorfin · · Score: 1

      The only place I see 'auger' is in this thread, and the useless replies, including my own. The synopsis and reg article both have the spelling 'augur'.

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    5. Re:auger? by forgoil · · Score: 1

      Yes of course, he insists that a G5 is way better for drilling holes than any product from Dell or similar iNTEL/AMD users... ;)

      On another note, I augur that a visit to http://www.spec.org could enlighten us all to which CPU is fast, and which is not.

    6. Re:auger? by Gorbie · · Score: 1

      What...you think I read the whole thing? That's not what being a member of the Slashbot Spelling Police is all about!!! It's about finding random mistakes and pouncing on them, all the while trying desparately not to make a typo of your own. There's no worse zooing than what you receive as an acting member of the spelling police and you make your own error aprehending a suspect.

      Get with it man! Read the whole thread...sheesh

    7. Re:auger? by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 1
      Yes...but what does auger mean in this context? We all know what augur means...we're geeks.

      Well, it might have been an honest question. The only reason I know what it means is from reading Asterix... :)

      I find it harder to believe people are still bothering to complain about spelling mistakes in story submissions... everyone knows they're added deliberately!

      (p.s. it seems the new version of the SSG doesn't all spelling errors in EVERY story...crapness.)

    8. Re:auger? by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      Does anyone remember Hard Hat Mack? That is the only game I know of that involves an auger... :^)

    9. Re:auger? by mkldev · · Score: 1
      And what do G5's have to do with boring holes in wood or ice, anyways?

      First, you turn on the G5. Then you simultaneously run both the iTunes visualizer and a script that does multiple Photoshop transforms on an image. Next, you run a game to stress the GPU. Finally, you point the exhaust openings down at the ice....

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    10. Re:auger? by briggsb · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sorry, we had to turn down the error generation it was getting a bit too much.

  3. Augur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    I like it when results augur well.

  4. Apple's results... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
  5. Doesn't Matter by Krach42 · · Score: 1, Troll

    These benchmarks don't matter, everyone on Slashdot is just going to say that they're fixed anyways. That or irrelevant.

    --

    I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    1. Re:Doesn't Matter by MikeXpop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They are irrelevant.

      DISCLAIMER: I am a fan of apple. I'm typing this on an iBook.

      Apple's been pissing me off with the advertising of the G5. All these benchmarks are just plain stupid. They compare it to Pentium 4, Xeon, whatever. Guess what Apple, you forgot a processor. The G4. Really, tell me, inform me as to who is currently torn between a 3GHz Dell and a Dual 2GHz Apple, and needs to know which one is faster. To 99.99% of the market, a few seconds difference encoding .mp3's really doesn't matter. Photoshop benchmarks? People who are going to be using photoshop professionally have most likely already decided whether or not they're going to buy an Apple. Even if the G5 was undeniably faster by a great margain, I doubt that fact would sell more than a few hundred units. However Apple, look at your site. You're still selling Powermac G4's for considerably less than the G5's. So I want to know how it compares to the G4. Because most of your sales aren't going to be from people who want to buy the fastest desktop computer. It's going to be from people who want to buy the fastest Apple.

      --
      Etiquette is etiquette. He kills his mother but he can't wear grey trousers.
    2. Re:Doesn't Matter by sniggly · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The performance gap would be very big, it might dissuade people from buying a mac laptop at this time, they'd wait until there was a G5 laptop... Could be a while before they figure out how to cool one down to fit into a laptop.

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    3. Re:Doesn't Matter by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      At least SPEC benchmarks are more generalized than photoshop filter performance...

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    4. Re:Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You moron. Nobody's going to run out and ditch their G4 because the G5 is faster. If you've got a G4 that you're happy with, continue to use it! If you're looking to upgrade, and you want to buy a high-end desktop from Apple, you're going to buy a G5 because that's all they sell. So advertising the G5 to G4 owners is fucking idiotic.

      Even if the G5 was undeniably faster by a great margain, I doubt that fact would sell more than a few hundred units.

      Apple's sold something like 900,000 G5's already, just in pre-orders. That's a bit more than "a few hundred units."

      You're still selling Powermac G4's for considerably less than the G5's.

      No, they're not. There are places you can still pick up new G4's--retailers with extra stock, that sort of thing. You can still buy refurbished machines from Apple and others, too. But the only G4's Apple is selling are the low-end OS 9-compatible machines from a couple of years ago, just so they have a desktop product for people who INSIST on running OS 9. The G5 is it.

      Because most of your sales aren't going to be from people who want to buy the fastest desktop computer. It's going to be from people who want to buy the fastest Apple.

      The 2x2 GHz Power Mac G5 is the fastest Macintosh. What more do you want to know?

      Bottom line: sounds like you're a giant whiner.

    5. Re:Doesn't Matter by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm a Mac fan, I love my Mac, and wouldn't trade it for the world.

      My point was that nearly everyone one Slashdot is going to complain about why Apple's benchmark is unfair.

      And the other half is going to say they don't really care about the benchmarks, because they've made up their mind anyways.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    6. Re:Doesn't Matter by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      Not true actually, the few benchmarks done by REAL USERS (ie owners) so far on the 1.6Ghz machine show it to be significantly slower than the dual 1.42Ghz G4 on some important Altivec benchmarks. The plain fact is that the Altivec implementation on the MPC 7455 is years ahead of that on the PPC 970. Moto know it, Apple know it and IBM know it. Users will learn it.

      The 970 still kicks ares on integer and - especially - floating point 'marks though...

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:Doesn't Matter by boaworm · · Score: 2, Informative

      The G5 consumes huge amounts of power (like 90W), so dont expect to see it in a laptop anytime soon.. Thats why the G5 PowerMac has "climate zones" and "9 silent fans".. lots of heat to move away.

      Dont get me wrong, its a great, powerful machine. AND it is rather quiet. Just that the G5 is no laptop stuff...

      --
      Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
      Aristotele
    8. Re:Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      G4 SPEC scores:
      Apple G4 1GHz:
      SPECint_base2000: 306
      SPECfp_base2000 : 187

      G5 SPEC scores:
      Apple G5 2 GHz (one chip only):
      SPECint_base2000: 800
      SPECfp_base2000 : 840

    9. Re:Doesn't Matter by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "Really, tell me, inform me as to who is currently torn between a 3GHz Dell and a Dual 2GHz Apple, and needs to know which one is faster."

      Your neighbour of course. The guy who brags about his $5K new ultra-fast machine which will bring his to new heights of web-surfing, tax-crunching and e-mail-sending pleasure.

      Oh, and people who do a lot of video encoding. If I can encode my video at 35fps instead of 29 fps, that is a large difference. It gives me more time to make sure I have tweaked all the settings nicely to give the best encode for the filesize.

      "Even if the G5 was undeniably faster by a great margain, I doubt that fact would sell more than a few hundred units."

      They already have 100,000 pre-orders. Of course I don't expect this rate of orders to stay steady. If you look at military enrollment statistics in Canada (and probably other countries affiiated with Britain) during the first world war, there was a large wave of fanatics joining in at the beginning and then reality set in and the numbers became more realistic.

      "So I want to know how it compares to the G4. Because most of your sales aren't going to be from people who want to buy the fastest desktop computer. It's going to be from people who want to buy the fastest Apple."

      I'm not entirely sure what you're implying here. Are you saying that the G4 might be faster than the G5? I find that hard to believe.

      Btw: One thing that almost makes me cry is that the FSB on the 2 GHz G5 machines is faster than the CPU clock speed of my iBook. (Sniffle ... )

    10. Re:Doesn't Matter by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      ...but less useful for a Photoshop user.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    11. Re:Doesn't Matter by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      Give it a rest! At the same clock speed* the PPC 970 uses L E S S power than an MPC 7445. It also supports some lovely power saving modes and rapid clock speed scaling that the G4 doesn't. That 90W figure is for T W O 2Ghz 970s.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    12. Re:Doesn't Matter by El_Ge_Ex · · Score: 0

      Guess what Apple, you forgot a processor. The G4.

      (using cartoonish cereal ad voice)

      Silly Mac boy....G5's are for x86 users. :)

      Seriously though, Why in the hell would Apple want to compare the G4 and G5 when they still have G4's lying around in the warehouses. Two words: Osborne Computer Look it up, google it, Nevermind, Just did.

      Anyways. G5's are marketed at x86 users because Apple knows they finally have a machine that can be taken seriously by the Computing Community. Jobs has us where he wants us: Salivating over a machine whose best OS is based on Unix.

      Personally, I welcome our new Apple Overlords.... :)

      -B

      (Yay! not even offtopic this time!)

    13. Re:Doesn't Matter by JamieF · · Score: 1

      I don't think you're looking at the right target market for the G5 ads.

      Apple has a lot of customers who do grpahics, publishing, 3D design, etc. who basically need a top-end desktop but who aren't willing to deal with a *nix workstation. These are the same people who would buy a 22" LCD display because they're not just surfing all day; they're doing work. For these people, the temptation to give up on having a Mac and just get a really fast PC running Windows is pretty strong, so if Apple can say that their current high-end machine is faster, that's a big deal.

      I don't think these are the same market as the folks who just want a computer that's super easy to use for the "digital hub" consumer apps (iPhoto / iTunes / iMovie), although I'm sure they're happy to have that as a bonus. Somebody who would buy an iBook because it costs $999 is not going to care much about the G5, but that doesn't mean that nobody cares.

    14. Re:Doesn't Matter by rthille · · Score: 1

      I'm not entirely sure what you're implying here. Are you saying that the G4 might be faster than the G5? I find that hard to believe.

      I'm not the original poster, but what I think the original poster was saying is that current Mac owners will want to know if it's worth it to upgrade. I've got a Beige G3-233 that's doing server duties (lots of disk, and Retrospect for backups), and a Powerbook G3 (Firewire). I'm considering the Powermac G5 (Dual), but I'm not sure if the extra speed is worth the extra $$s. Especially since I don't have as much time to play with editing movies (the only application I use that needs the extra CPU) as I'd like.

      My main problem with the G5 is the size vs. expandability. It's about as expandable as a Shuttle SN41G2 (aside from RAM and 2nd CPU) but many many times larger. I for one would like to see a Mac with the design like the Shuttle: non-integrated monitor eMac if you will, with space for 2 hard drives, a couple of cards, etc...

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    15. Re:Doesn't Matter by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "I'm considering the Powermac G5 (Dual), but I'm not sure if the extra speed is worth the extra $$s. Especially since I don't have as much time to play with editing movies (the only application I use that needs the extra CPU) as I'd like."

      Good point. If I was in your position I would wait until a lot of 3rd party reviews come out and use that data to determine whether or not getting a G5 machine is worthwhile.

    16. Re:Doesn't Matter by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This would only be the case if Adobe is incapable of exploiting a processor that is faster for general purpose use.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    17. Re:Doesn't Matter by 47Ronin · · Score: 1

      Even if the G5 was undeniably faster by a great margain, I doubt that fact would sell more than a few hundred units.

      Try a few hundred THOUSAND.. and that was just the preorders for the single low and mid-range level G5 towers. That doesn't include the dual 2 GHz G5s.

      --
      Those who laugh at you for you having a Mac.. are the people who constantly call you to fix their PC.
    18. Re:Doesn't Matter by Whatchamacallit · · Score: 1

      G3 with file and print serving will probably not see much of a difference in speed. Sure the G5 has a much larger bus and Serial ATA drives but the bottleneck is the Network!

      I'm running an NT Server 2000 on very old hardware and all it's used for is file sharing and storage. Unless I put two Gigabit Ethernet Cards into it and put it on a fast Gigabit Cisco Switch then activate both NIC's and ensure the switch is properly configured, it's not going to make much of a difference in performance in regards to file sharing. Besides most of the workstations accessing it are at most 100Mbit NIC's so all that will do for me is allow more machines to connect. It won't speed up the file copy process all that much.

      You want speed for file sharing? Then get a highend SCSI card, new drives, and a higherspeed NIC. Then upgrade your hub to a gigabit switch and make sure you use Cat5 cabling. Or you could go Fibre Channel for the disks. But again, the bottleneck is the network!

      CPU has very little to do with network file sharing performance. It will make a difference with a Application Servers but not with simple file servers.

      Bottom line, a P-90 first gen Pentium with 128MB's of RAM and a fast NIC running Linux will keep up with faster server hardware when it comes to file sharing. Heck, you could probably run it with 32MB or 64MB's of RAM!

      When OSX refuses to upgrade on that aging G3 then install Yellowdog Linux and it will out perform OS 9!

      No need to buy a G5 for server duties of this nature, it's a waste of money. Wait for the G5 to make it to the XServe if you have enough clients to make it worth while. Otherwise piece together a Linux box instead. Keep it the PowerPC G3 if you want. Run it headless...

    19. Re:Doesn't Matter by rthille · · Score: 1


      Oh, sorry I wasn't clear. The G5 would replace the Powerbook (my primary user-interaction machine), not the G3 server.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    20. Re:Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you consider 900,000 to be "something like" 100,000, your numbers are a bit off. By a factor of 9. Still, 100,000 is pretty incredible for just preorders, and way above what that guy was saying (just a couple hundred??!? right...apple isn't THAT beleagured... lol)

    21. Re:Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, tell me, inform me as to who is currently torn between a 3GHz Dell and a Dual 2GHz Apple, and needs to know which one is faster.

      My dad, for one. He's been a PC guy for over 20 years and has programmed on or used just about every Microsoft OS in that time. He's no MS lover, but it's always been the most cost effective solution for him, both in terms of bang/buck and in terms of familiarity over the years. Switching to another OS (Linux, etc) or platform (Mac) was never a real consideration for him because it didn't make enough sense for his business. All of his software customers run Windows, and the tools he uses to put together his books (Photoshop, some publishing apps, not sure) run just fine on Windows. Why switch?

      As a big Mac and Unix person, I've been trying to get him to consider alternatives for ages. He always listens to my arguments with interest, but ultimately it never pans out because it doesn't make enough sense. I showed my mom how easy it is to upload pictures to the web from iPhoto, something she's struggled with on Windows to the point of not wanting to bother. But my dad always said they'd get along just fine with Windows, no need to spend so much more money on a Mac.

      So the other night he called and totally floored me. He's very interested in a G5, and wants me to make my case for why he should get one instead of a high end PC. These benchmarks had a lot to do with it. They caught his attention, and now that he's using Photoshop more and more with his digital photography, a Mac is starting to make more sense. And since the kind of PC he'd be looking at is in the same price range (or even beyond -- dual Xeons), he's really considering it for the first time.

      Maybe my dad is an exception, but I don't really think so. A lot of people are taking note that Apple has something really nice on their hands with the G5. A lot of people in the PC world have never considered a Mac because they heard they were too slow or too expensive. Photoshop runs just fine on the PC, and just because people think they've already decided on another PC for their next machine doesn't mean Apple shouldn't go and market to them. These benchmarks are just one way to get PC users to start listening to Apple, and for Apple to -- gasp -- increase market share! Apple isn't going to keep their shareholders too happy if they are content with selling G5s to current Mac users as they feel the need to upgrade. That's just a silly business strategy.

      Sheesh, try to think outside the box. Or what was it? Think Different!

    22. Re:Doesn't Matter by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      " People who are going to be using photoshop professionally have most likely already decided whether or not they're going to buy an Apple. Even if the G5 was undeniably faster by a great margain, I doubt that fact would sell more than a few hundred units. "

      As an apple fan you are correct. But hasn't apple's fanbase and even its ads always been about being part of a better community with better hardware (which can be argued) at a comparable price (which needs some fuzzy minds to believe).

      Perhaps this campaign isn't to switch people over because Apple is faster but to make their own customers still feel great that their choice is the best and the stupid MS people are getting ripped off with crappy products?

    23. Re:Doesn't Matter by lithandie · · Score: 1
      photoshop benchmarks on a 1.6 G5 are found here

      the 2x2GHz should be even better...

    24. Re:Doesn't Matter by stmiller · · Score: 1

      MikeXpop asks a very good question. What he is "implying here" is: Apple does not want us to know how the G5 compares to the G4. And I have no idea how you can misconstrue him to say, "that the G4 might be faster than the G5". He wants to know if the price difference between the G4 and the G5 is worth the performance difference.

    25. Re:Doesn't Matter by SiliconJesus101 · · Score: 1
      I think what he is really trying to figure out is if the upgrade price would be worth it. Should he be ready to sell off his old Mac and plunk down the cash on a shiny new G5?? Or is it maybe a few percentage points faster than his G4?? I do a similar thing with video cards. Is my GeForce 3 Ti-500 only a hair slower than the new 4x00?? It's just a way to get a bearing on things as relative to your current setup. He probably doesn't use PC's as often as to be able to draw a clear conclusion. I know I would want to see how my stuff stacks up and not see benchmarks of a new card (which I don't have and have no guage as to how fast it is) compared to some other newer card.

      As a side note, I am presently typing this on an old iMac 266 with 160MB of RAM that I got as a tip from one of my customers :-) Yes, It's slow...but it lets me see OS X. I for one would definitely be a Mac convert just for this OS alone. Too bad the hardware is so damned expensive.

      --

      "The strong will do what they want, the weak will do what they must."
      -Thucydides

    26. Re:Doesn't Matter by MikeXpop · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what I was "implying". For once, thanks for putting words in my mouth =)

      --
      Etiquette is etiquette. He kills his mother but he can't wear grey trousers.
    27. Re:Doesn't Matter by Toraz+Chryx · · Score: 1

      " The G5 consumes huge amounts of power (like 90W)"

      Except it doesn't, at 1.8Ghz it goes through ~42W, the 2Ghz parts should be in the region of 47W each.

      That particularly piece of fud can be traced back to a Register.co.uk journalist getting the power consumption figures for BOTH G5s confused (they claimed 97W each, which is about the combined figure for a dually 2Ghz rig)

    28. Re:Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that what matters is advertising that attracts "Switchers" to grow the market share. They care about PC vs Mac.

      The existing market share of faithful Mac users probably know quite well that G5's "blow away" G4's. They are not the advertising target.

    29. Re:Doesn't Matter by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      The missing piece is the heat put out by the bridge ASICs that are providing the huge pipe to memory.

      Putting a PPC970 in a laptop with a memory & bus controller that also fits within laptop power constraints will result in a memory bandwidth that is as choked down as a G4 is, I suspect.

  6. Shocking! by mr.henry · · Score: 5, Funny

    According to Apple, in certain benchmarks, the G5 is faster than the NEC Earth Simulator.

    1. Re:Shocking! by John+Allsup · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well... yes... of course. This will obviously happen when the computation is to dependant on results of earlier computations that the parallelism and interconnect speed of Earth Simulator cannot help at all! I expect you can do similar with a P4 (though almost all such examples are probably heavily contrived.)

      (Recall that the clock speed of an individual processor in the ES is 500Mhz, and each processor has only 1 scalar unit, the rest being specialised vector units.) Thus you could probably contrive an example where the raw clock speed of a P4 could get the work done more quickly. I can't think of such an example myself, but someone out there probably can. ...I may be wrong.

      --
      John_Chalisque
    2. Re:Shocking! by mblase · · Score: 1

      Granted, the Earth Simulator has more raw processing power, but when it comes to Quake 3 the G5 has it cold.

    3. Re:Shocking! by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah? Well..

      ------------------
      Your life is the sum of a remainder of an unbalanced equation inherent to the programming of the matrix. You are the eventuality of an anomaly, which despite my sincerest efforts I have been unable to eliminate from what is otherwise a harmony of mathematical precision. While it remains a burden to sedulously avoid it, it is not unexpected, and thus not beyond a measure of control. Which has led you, inexorably, here.
      ------------------

      So there!

    4. Re:Shocking! by kolbeinn · · Score: 1

      IIRC Fibonacci numbers can't be calculated in paralell so thats one test where the P4 would
      beat ES.

      --
      End of line
    5. Re:Shocking! by algie_f · · Score: 1

      Actually I believe the Fibonacci sequence has a closed form.

    6. Re:Shocking! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea perhaps a program not compiled for parallel processing?

    7. Re:Shocking! by barawn · · Score: 1

      Easy:

      int main()
      {
      int i = 1;
      int j = 1;

      exit(i+j);
      }

      (Note to all nitpickers: yah, yah, all the overhead associated with running a binary MAY make it quicker to run on a massively parallel machine. Blah. You get the point.)

      You can't parallelize 1 operation. On a P4 that 1 operation would get done in what, 1 clock cycle? Same for the ES, and the clock speed's higher on the P4, so the wall time is shorter for the P4 by a fraction of a nanosecond. Parallelizable code is actually quite specific, and there are a lot of cases of non-parallelizable code.

    8. Re:Shocking! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no SX-6 port of Adobe Photoshop, you see.

  7. Am I the only one... by angst7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Far more interested in the progress and development of AMD's Opteron line than all this G5 stuff? I mean, dont misunderstand. I'm excited about desktop 64 bit computing, but I really dont want to be locked into a whole platform. These benchmarks really say to me that the G5 is ok, a little better, but you've gotta go all apple to get it.

    Just my pennies.

    ---
    Jedimom.com, go banana!

    --
    StrategyTalk.com, PC Game Forums
    1. Re:Am I the only one... by MesiahTaz · · Score: 1, Informative

      Apple will not be the only one selling 970s. IBM is basing a new line of servers on them too.

      --
      Are you an open source warrior?
    2. Re:Am I the only one... by Auckerman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I really dont want to be locked into a whole platform.

      You ARE locked into a platform: x86 based computers.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    3. Re:Am I the only one... by RadRafe · · Score: 1

      you've gotta go all apple Do it. You'll thank yourself.

    4. Re:Am I the only one... by nickos · · Score: 1

      Buy a Pegasos G5 when they come out and run Linux on it and you'll have yourself a quiet and energy efficient 64 bit desktop with no lock-in effect.

    5. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 5, Informative
      > I really dont want to be locked into a whole platform.

      So go G5. There are two vendors of compatible processors, IBM and Motorola, while the only vendor of x86-64 is AMD, and the only vendor of IPF is Intel... not only that, the PowerPC is more efficient and has a technically brighter future.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    6. Re:Am I the only one... by Dav3K · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, by purchasing a G5 you aren't locked in to Apple's platform. Yes, they are the only vendor for such equipment, but that will change once IBM begins to ship their version of the same processor. Even with purchasing an Apple branded PowerPC computer, you are still free to apply whichever operating system you like - there are many versions of linux (Gentoo, Yellowdog, RH,) there is Darwin (Apple's BSD clone) or OS X. Lots of choices for lots of different platforms.

      That's not to say the Opteron isn't a cool-ass chip tho...just saying that between the two, we consumers have great non-intel options these days. I champion both companies.

    7. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > the G5 is ok, a little better, but you've gotta go all apple to get it.

      For now you're right, but IBM will sell them too later. IBM prices tend to be high, but also quality; for the low end, EyeTech in the UK and Genesi in Luxembourg are now selling G4 systems. They should have G5 systems just a little down the road after IBM.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    8. Re:Am I the only one... by Otter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I certainly don't propose to tell you what to be excited about -- but the point of the Apple G5's isn't that they're the unbelievablest computers ever (high-performance 64-bit workstations have been around for ages) but that it's a major step forward in the world of retail consumer computers. When Opterons start showing up in that context, running Windows, then they'll be comparable stories.

    9. Re:Am I the only one... by lamz · · Score: 5, Funny

      So go G5. There are two vendors of compatible processors, IBM and Motorola, while the only vendor of x86-64 is AMD, and the only vendor of IPF is Intel... not only that, the PowerPC is more efficient and has a technically brighter future.

      Plus, it's what all the cool kids use. You want to be cool, right?

      --

      Mike van Lammeren
      It will challenge your head, your brain, and your mind.

    10. Re:Am I the only one... by angst7 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You make a good point (actually several people have said similar things). I guess the most important thing to me will be which chipset (G5/Opteron/Other) will have the best support among motherboard and other hardware manufacturers. Traditionally the x86 family has been the hands-down leader in this regard, and if the trend continues I dont see myself migrating to another architecture anytime soon.

      When the performance only varies by a few percent, the cost and availability will totally make the decision for me.

      --
      StrategyTalk.com, PC Game Forums
    11. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you're only interested in the G5, I'm not sure I understand where the situation differs from buying a wintelCPU product. Both sets of hardware can run Linux and BSD quite nicely.

      It seems odd to me that wintel hardware makers like HP seem more desirable because they don't make an OS to support their products. They even use software driven hardware (e.g. winmodems) that will be non-functional if you ditch the OS they bundled.

      Admittedly Macs aren't everyone's cup of tea, but finding fault with Apple because they actively develop their own operating systems (one of which is open source) is a bit like finding fault with your parents for actually raising you instead of putting you up for adoption when you were born.

    12. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I should think before answering... third time.

      > a whole platform

      What does this mean?

      AFAH/WG, the PowerPC is even more open than x86-64 or IPF, having two chip vendors (IBM and Moto) while the latter have one each (AMD and Intel) only.

      AFAS/WG, the same holds true: the PowerPC runs GNU/Linux and BSD just fine, besides Apple's semi-proprietary Mac OS X instead of MS's completely proprietary Windows; the Hurd is being ported, there is Amiga-derived MorphOS and the AmigaOS itself.

      Some PCI stuff is more expensive due to the presence of x86 assembly code in firmware of dirty cheap adaptors, but this should be fixed by AMD and Intel adopting OpenFirmware's Forth dialect. So all in all, it is a more open platform.

      And BTW, if someday we get to use processors made from GNU GPL'd designs, RISC in general is a better candidate than x86-64 or IPF, being much simpler and more efficient. See that China is trying to go MIPS... MIPS in the East and PowerPC in the West would make for a much more open environment than, say, IPF in the US, x86-64 in Europe, MIPS in China and PowerPC in the high-end...

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    13. Re:Am I the only one... by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      there is Darwin (Apple's BSD clone) or OS X
      Darwin *is* OS X, or more specifically, the kernel and the command line userland stuff. OS X includes the GUI and all the cool GUI apps.
      Its not really a BSD clone either, its a melding of actual BSD (FreeBSD and NetBSD) and a microkernel.

      As an aside, IBM has been supporting SuSE on Power based pSeries boxes for a while. I'm sure they have the Linux on G5 thing well solved by now.

    14. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, well.. Too bad they're still using G3s... Serriously. Well, serriously, iff the prices are halfway decent.

    15. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      xnu (the modified version of Mach used in OS X) is not a microkernel. Lots of stuff was added that shouldn't be in a microkernel. Think of pre-NT 5.x vs old skool NT. Graphics were added. It's no longer a microkernel.

    16. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah when hell freezes over.

      The company making the pegasos only ever managed to make 600 G3 based boards and those didn't work properly.

      There currently isn't any northbridge available for the G5 outside of IBMs (internal atm) and apples which you won't get.

      When the come out, pah. It'll be 2 years by which time they will be nothing.

    17. Re:Am I the only one... by confused+one · · Score: 1

      They're still running G3's and for what they're charging, I can buy Apple hardware.

    18. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm excited about desktop 64 bit computing, but I really dont want to be locked into a whole platform.

      You're talking about being locked into Opteron! What the hell, dude??

    19. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 2, Insightful
      > it's what all the cool kids use

      I am not a kid, I have a kid.

      > it's what all the cool kids use

      Actually I want to have a cool, silent, energy-efficient machine. While current Apples aren't as silent and energy-efficient as I'd like, I can get a silent, energy-efficient EyeTech or Genesi.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    20. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But I can buy compatible processors from two different companies and compatible systems from many different companies. With Apple there is no freedom of choice.

    21. Re:Am I the only one... by kyrre · · Score: 1

      In this respect, wouldn't it be Pegasos that is a vendor lock-in? It can run GNU/Linux, BSD, and possibly some other operating systems. The Apple G5 however, will run Mac OS X in addition to all the operatingsystems the Pegasos can field.

      What is this lock-in you write about?

    22. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      high-performance 64-bit workstations have been around for ages

      Not at this price point, nor with this degree of mainstream application support.

      unbelievablest

      Oh, for the love of god...

    23. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's not locked into a single vendor, then.

    24. Re:Am I the only one... by ipjohnson · · Score: 1

      You can buy two different CPU and have them work in the same motherboard?

      Besides you can (or will in a short period of time) be able to buy 970s from IBM.

    25. Re:Am I the only one... by russellh · · Score: 1
      But I can buy compatible processors from two different companies and compatible systems from many different companies. With Apple there is no freedom of choice.

      OS X is Unix.

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    26. Re:Am I the only one... by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      IIRC, IBM is planning a line of servers using the same processor and running Linux.

    27. Re:Am I the only one... by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 1

      When Opterons start showing up in that context, running Windows, then they'll be comparable stories.

      Unless you start looking at power consumption and heat dissipation, in which case the G5s will walk all over Intel. I'm not going to buy a Mac, so I really with this wasn't true, but it is.

    28. Re:Am I the only one... by angst7 · · Score: 1

      AFAH/WG, the PowerPC is even more open than x86-64 or IPF, having two chip vendors (IBM and Moto) while the latter have one each (AMD and Intel) only.

      AFAS/WG, the same holds true: the PowerPC runs GNU/Linux and BSD just fine, besides Apple's semi-proprietary Mac OS X instead of MS's completely proprietary Windows; the Hurd is being ported, there is Amiga-derived MorphOS and the AmigaOS itself.

      This is all well and good, but If I want to go out and buy an Opteron today, I can go to Pricewatch, find several vendors of CPU/Mobo combos and take my pick of configuration, motherboard manufacturer, etc. If I want to go out and buy a G5, I can pony up the $$$ for a Powermac, or sit on my hands until there are options actually produced by someone else. I have yet to see anyone doing this.

      I'd love (Really and truely love) to see some options in this regard. If you can point me to them, I'd be thankful. But until I see otherwise, G5=Apple to me.

      --
      StrategyTalk.com, PC Game Forums
    29. Re:Am I the only one... by whovian · · Score: 1

      ... not only that, the PowerPC is more efficient and has a technically brighter future.

      Tell that to Betamax. Just because on paper it might be arguably better, doesn't mean it will come to pass.

      --
      To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
    30. Re:Am I the only one... by Delphiki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If not the exact same processors, then very similar ones, but does that even really matter for this argument? Linux will already run on PowerPC chips and has for quite some time. So hardware aside (yes, you are more "locked-in" with Apple hardware, but why this matters I don't know) you have two platforms, Mac OS X and Linux (and any other open source OS that will compile for PowerPC, FreeBSD and OpenBSD might, I'm not sure). How is that worse than having Windows and Linux, unless you prefer Windows, which isn't really a lock in issue as much as a personal preference.

      --

      Feel free to mod me "-1 - Angry Jerk".

    31. Re:Am I the only one... by the+quick+brown+fox · · Score: 2, Funny
      OS X is Unix.

      Oh man. SCO is soooo gonna sue your ass for saying that.

      (Before anyone corrects me, I know the Open Group actually owns the trademark. But s/Unix/SCO/ just doesn't have the same ring.)

    32. Re:Am I the only one... by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      Also don't forget:
      Transmeta Crusoe (x86 "compat")
      VIA C3 and allies

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    33. Re:Am I the only one... by DrXym · · Score: 1
      Which represents a vast range of choice from hundreds if not thousands of different hardware and software vendors. Even at the CPU level, there are at least 3 or 4 chip makers that spring readily to mind, dozens of board makers and the choice gets bigger from there.


      The only thing you are effectively locked into is the x86 instruction set but I doubt many people give a damn about even if you took the time to explain the alternatives and the supposed benefits of one instruction set over another.

    34. Re:Am I the only one... by zulux · · Score: 1

      These benchmarks really say to me that the G5 is ok, a little better, but you've gotta go all apple to get it.

      Apple's G5 is just a baby IBM mainframe - in a silver chassis.

      So you do have an upgrade path...

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    35. Re:Am I the only one... by afidel · · Score: 1

      Opteron won't but the Athlon 64 will, and soon. AMD has moved up the launch date for the new Athlon line based around the Opteron core to Sept 23rd. Of course much like Apple with the G5 the Athlon 64's true prowess won't be felt for some time as a full 64bit consumer OS isn't yet out for it. For now to take full advantage of either CPU you will need Linux.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    36. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 2, Informative

      >So go G5. There are two vendors of compatible
      >processors, IBM and Motorola, while the only vendor
      >of x86-64 is AMD, and the only vendor of IPF is
      >Intel... not only that, the PowerPC is more
      >efficient and has a technically brighter future.

      No, only IBM produces the G5, motorola only produces
      32 bit variants. And that is just the processor.
      If you are using Opteron you get hardware from
      many companies, not only Apple.

    37. Re:Am I the only one... by jovlinger · · Score: 1

      OT:
      flutter away little butterfly... just flutter away.

      I saw that again yesterday, after finding it on the net. Fantastic movie.

    38. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > G5=Apple

      True enough, for the moment. But the future perspective is based more on fundations than on the current situation, and here the PowerPC is more open.

      Now it can come to happen that either the IPF or the x86-64 become more open, but for the moment both have single sources of supply, closed architectures and not much you can run on them.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    39. Re:Am I the only one... by m00by · · Score: 1

      wooo comparable...right. a "64bit" processor with a 32 bit glued on to it, yeah that's comparable to a system that just runs the 32 bit stuff at native or faster speed on the "64bit" hardware. comparable..sure, yeah.... =D I make the "64bit" disclaimer, as it seems all of these upcoming processors are not "true" 64 bit processors, but hey, IBM/Apple seems to have a much more elegant solution than gluing it on, or copying PA-RISC =D

    40. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 3, Insightful
      > Tell that to Betamax.

      This is not relevant. Betamax was proprietary to Sony, while the PowerPC has quite a momentum and community around it.

      > Just because on paper it might be arguably better

      This has nothing to do with paper. The Apple G5s are there, IBM's are just around the corner, and Genesi and EyeTech are already preparing to fit their current G4 systems with G5. I write from a 366MHz G3 that is quite enough for me, and silent.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    41. Re:Am I the only one... by prockcore · · Score: 1

      You ARE locked into a platform: x86 based computers.

      That's like being locked inside California.. not quite the same thing as being locked inside a closet.

    42. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      >> [...] but that will change once IBM begins to
      >> ship their version of the same processor.

      Come on, it is IBM that has made the G5 *not* Apple.
      And the G5 is the consumer version of the Power4,
      why, why, why do you think IBM will make another
      consumer version? And *who* do you think would run
      it? Really, if it is not Apple that is doing the
      benchmarketing the x86 processors are both cheaper
      and faster.

    43. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > only IBM produces the G5, motorola only produces 32 bit variants

      This is a transitory situation for a specific generation. The fundamental concept here is the architecture; the PowerPC one is shared and quite open (OpenFirmware, GNU/Linux the primary OS supported by vendors), while x86-64 and IPF aren't: proprietary boot schemas, preference for MS Windows...

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    44. Re:Am I the only one... by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, but that platform we're "locked" into has two major CPU vendors and hundreds of individual variants.

      You can build/buy yourself a basic bookpc for $300 or get an 8-way compaq that can nip at the heels of Sun's usparc3 based servers.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    45. Re:Am I the only one... by cactopus · · Score: 1

      Apple's G5 is just a baby IBM mainframe - in a silver chassis.

      So you do have an upgrade path...


      Not really... it's more like a p-Series box. It's basically similar to a 44P workstation or SunBlade 2000.

      Mainframes like the z-Series are CISCer than CISC... they're like VAXen to a certain extent. I think I was quoted something like a mainframe doing 16 step financial transactions in one clock cycle. (I'd have to go back to my source to verify this but even so they are impressive machines)... the p-series is also tres macho. Even a 20Mhz POWER 1 feels like a 133Mhz Pentium. I have a POWER 3 based system with my name on it (will be getting it later this year).

    46. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kidding me? Do you actually believe consumers are going to be buying 970's from IBM? Gimmie a break.

    47. Re:Am I the only one... by eyver · · Score: 1

      And you can buy either IBM or Motorola chips for Apple machines.

      And you can put in a new IBM or Motorola chip into an older machine through upgrades, such as those from PowerLogix. You can have a machine produced before 2000 running a top-of-the-line G4. That upgrade route may seem expensive, but compare the price of it to buying a new nice motherboard, new memory, and new CPU, as well as whatever else might need upgrading on an x86 machine.

      I'm not bashing the x86 world. I'm just protecting the Apple crowd from your argument. ;)

    48. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      64-bit windows will be running on 64-bit x86
      before 64-bit MacOS will run on the G5.

      Allready has 32-bit windows been running 64-bit
      x86 for months, and finally 32-bit MacOS will
      run on 64-bit G5. And this, *even* when it is
      Apple that is making the OS, *that* is not
      good.

    49. Re:Am I the only one... by Sillypuddy · · Score: 0

      The last time I checked, we left the compatible x86 chip world with the last pentium.

      Starting with P2 and above we can no longer plug in AMD/Cyrix/etc chip into each other. How is that choice?

      I love the AMD cpus (i have 5 desktops) but the chipset support don't compare to Intel's. What choice do I have? none. I can't get Intel chipset motherboards that support AMD and vice versa

      -joe

    50. Re:Am I the only one... by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Oh, gosh, you're so right they're the most unbelievablest, fun-est, golly-gee-whizziest computers ever! God bless every G5!

      I apologize for mixing mythologies and the bad timing of this bad rhyming.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    51. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      >This is a transitory situation for a specific
      >generation. The fundamental concept here is the
      >architecture; the PowerPC one is shared and quite
      >open (OpenFirmware, GNU/Linux the primary OS
      >supported by vendors), while x86-64 and IPF aren't:
      >proprietary boot schemas, preference for MS
      >Windows...

      That may be true for the PowerPC, but not for
      Apple hardware. Booting is backward compatible
      and I am sure works just fine with grub.

      I think there will be way more Debian on 64-bit
      Opteron/Athlon64 then on G5 machines.

      Why? Because it will be faster and way cheaper.
      Although the PowerPC ISA is more 'elegant',
      who realy care?

    52. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      They do *not* develop an open source OS.

      They take BSD mix it with MACH, both of which is
      open, and adds a --- no open in any way ---
      graphic user interface based on NeXT.

    53. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      64bit" processor with a 32 bit glued on to it

      Umm you do realize of course you're also describing the 970, and even worse the Mac OS you can run on it ?

      Don't you?

    54. Re:Am I the only one... by alienw · · Score: 1

      Yeah. You can upgrade some antique POS mac for like $400 for an upgrade card. Yeah, that's like $50 cheaper than getting a brand-new PC computer. Except that you have to stick with the ancient memory, ancient hard drive, ancient motherboard, ancient slow system bus, ancient networking technology, et cetera. With PCs, a new motherboard ($80), processor ($60-$150), and memory ($30-$150) will serve you much better for far less money.

      Also, you can't buy G5 chips from motorola. IBM is the only company making them.

    55. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's what the rich kids use. You want to be poor, right?

    56. Re:Am I the only one... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      MIPS is not open in any way. It is controlled by
      MIPS corp. MIPS does not produce MIPS chips, only
      sell there IP. Is *that* open?

      We do have an open RISC and that is the SPARC
      developed by ESA, the core is called Leon and
      is under the GPL.

      The x86 today is allmost RISC, only unused instructions are interpreted by the microprogram.

      And while The Hurd do boot on the PowerPC
      (and maby on the Alpha) it only runs (semi stable)
      on the x86 platform.

    57. Re:Am I the only one... by zulux · · Score: 1


      Yes,
      I was using the 'Maniframe' incorectly in the modern sense - sometihng more powerfull than a workstation. Server is a more apportiate word.

      I haven't had the opurtunity to work with a true mainframe - but looking over the sholders of come of the old COBOL programmers, I'm actually quite impressed with the care that goes into some of these systems. A bit cryptic... but interesting.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    58. Re:Am I the only one... by Lemmeoutada+Collecti · · Score: 1

      Of couirse since this is a Mac vs. PC debate, butterflies should flutter away... especially rainbow butterflies...

      --

      You can have it fast, accurate, or pretty. Pick any 2.
    59. Re:Am I the only one... by afidel · · Score: 1

      1.8Ghz Opteron-84.7W Max Thermal Power Disipation
      1.8Ghz PPC 970-42W TYPICAL (no Max listed)
      Typical on the Operon is probably around 65W, so about 50% higher. Given the Opterons superior performance (Specfp_base2000 of 1209 vs 840 for the G5 and Specint_base2000 of 1248 vs 800 for the G5) I would say on an instruction per watt basis they are tied =)

      p.s.
      Apple's idea of a processor whitepaper is a farking joke! The thing reads like a press release for gods sake, I had to go to IBM to find a proper whitepaper for the PPC970.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    60. Re:Am I the only one... by swillden · · Score: 1

      I am not a kid, I have a kid.

      I have four kids, and I'm still a kid. Growing up is overrated.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    61. Re:Am I the only one... by Smurf · · Score: 1
      The AC said: they actively develop their own operating systems (one of which is open source)

      He was talking about MacOS X and Darwin, which are two separate systems. Of course, MacOS X is based (and virtually contains) Darwin, but you can have a Darwin-only installation. He meant Darwin when he said one OS is open source.

    62. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, there's more likely to be a light inside the closet.

    63. Re:Am I the only one... by ipjohnson · · Score: 1

      I said it was an option to buy a machine from IBM with a 970 in it. Which I do believe they will sell a few ;-)

    64. Re:Am I the only one... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Why? Because it will be faster and way cheaper.

      Depends on what your criteria are. IBM will soon have the fastest PCs around with their 4-way G5 systems, and for $3500, they'll cost about the same as a dual-processor Xeon from Dell and probably not much more than a dual-processor Opteron/Athlon64 (hard to say since I haven't seen any pricing).

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    65. Re:Am I the only one... by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 1

      Actually I want to have a cool, silent, energy-efficient machine. While current Apples aren't as silent and energy-efficient as I'd like, I can get a silent, energy-efficient EyeTech or Genesi.

      I've checked out a 1.6 GHz G5 PowerMac at my campus computer store, and I must say that I was amazed at how quiet it is. (And this is coming from a Cube owner/phanatic.) I had to put my ear right up to it to hear anything.

    66. Re:Am I the only one... by DavidBrown · · Score: 1

      Admittedly Macs aren't everyone's cup of tea, but finding fault with Apple because they actively develop their own operating systems (one of which is open source) is a bit like finding fault with your parents for actually raising you instead of putting you up for adoption when you were born.

      What's the use of an open source OS when the hardware is completely closed-source and relies on a proprietary BIOS? Apple will be open source when I can build one all by myself using parts I can buy from someone other than Apple.

      --
      144l. ph34r my 133t l3g4l 5k1lz!
    67. Re:Am I the only one... by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1
      Locked into a platform? WTF are you talking about? Just type
      ./configure, make, sudo make install
      to recompile your favorite software.
    68. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > I've checked out a 1.6 GHz G5 PowerMac at my campus computer store, and I must say that I was amazed at how quiet it is. (And this is coming from a Cube owner/phanatic.)

      I believe you. Thing is, I tend to work during the night, and I live by the Swiss fields. You can hardly imagine anything more silent. During the wee hours, you can hear your breath. My iBook is too loud for me, I'm looking forward to either a Cube or a Genesi Pegasos.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    69. Re:Am I the only one... by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 1

      Those sorts of upgrade cards exist for PCs too, but no one uses the for a very good reason, because they SUCK! Sure you might be upgrading the processor, but you end up severely limiting the available bandwidth of the chip to even less than what was available on the previous system usually. A G4 with less bandwidth than a G3 is hardly a worthwhile upgrade for anyone, just as the old PIII upgrades for Socket 7 boards were mostly useless.

      These upgrades are fine for people who absolutely can not replace their motherboard because they have some super-expensive proprietary hardware in there, but otherwise they usually cost about the same as buying a new processor, motherboard and memory while offering FAR less performance.

    70. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > That may be true for the PowerPC, but not for Apple hardware.

      Apple uses OpenFirmware. You can't get more open than that AFA boot goes.

      > Booting is backward compatible and I am sure works just fine with grub.

      But the x86 BIOS causes PCI cards, for one, to be exclusively x86. While Mac PCI cards, working with OF, are cross-platform.

      > it will be faster and way cheaper.

      G5s are quite competitive, and G[34]s are silent and energy-efficient.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    71. Re:Am I the only one... by instantnoodles · · Score: 1

      The main reason I purchased a PC for college was because of the wealth of software available when compared to macs. Also, more people use PCs. That means more stores, lower prices and much easier to find support.

      I'd never fault Apple for developing its own OS.

    72. Re:Am I the only one... by charnov · · Score: 1

      The chipset on the G5 is mostly made by AMD (the hypertransport chip) and the process the G5 is made on (and the fab plant) is a joint venture between AMD and IBM.

      --
      [RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
    73. Re:Am I the only one... by jacrawf · · Score: 1
      The proprietary BIOS.

      In reality, it's no more proprietary than many PC BIOSes out there. Just because it's not as well understood does not make it proprietary.

      If you were saying this five or six years ago, then you'd have an argument, but with all the New World machines (Blue & White G3 and later) it's been Open Firmware and pretty well documented. Hell, even OpenBSD boots on Apple hardware now and, you know, those kids are not the quickest to support proprietary anything. They don't particularly enjoy reverse engineering hardware because it's more difficult to make your software stable and secure that way.

      Apple has generally been quite open about documenting their own hardware for the last few years. The same certainly can't be said for certain other PC parts manufacturers.

    74. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going all Apple is not a bad thing. It's FREAKIN AWESOME!!! You should try it sometime

    75. Re:Am I the only one... by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Yeah, both are really popular with gamers ;-)

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    76. Re:Am I the only one... by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Hell, MIPS is more open than PPC or x86, if you're going to be that way.

      However, MIPS has even fewer desktop choices with regard to software than PPC.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    77. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize you have no idea what you're talking about?

    78. Re:Am I the only one... by zonker · · Score: 0

      ibm and motorola make powerpc processors. mac's also run linux and bsd just fine too...

    79. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NetBSD and OpenBSD run on Macs, FreeBSD doesn't (a PowerPC port of FreeBSD is being developed, but it doesn't work yet).

      You also have the choice of running Darwin. The big difference compared to OS X will of course be that you'll be using X11 as the native windowing system. And of course you don't have to pay for upgrades.

      I also expect the Hurd (and thus the GNU system) to become runnable on Macs at some point. While OSX/Darwin and the Hurd run under different forks of Mach development, the basic Mach interfaces should still be similar. I could probably get some of the Hurd servers running under Darwin or Mac OS X with a bit of tweaking.

    80. Re:Am I the only one... by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > MIPS is more open than PPC

      Is it? I didn't know. Do you have supporting facts or references? If true, it could explain China's choice.

      I know for sure that SPARC is the open architecture, including being the birthplace of OF and having a backing consortium etc, but Sun's focus on Solaris is stealing its momentum. I certainly would welcome a Leo-based GNU/Linux desktop!

      > MIPS has even fewer desktop choices with regard to software than PPC

      Agreed, but SGI is shifting to IPF and China isn't still there... if China really pushes it, it could yet be a containder again.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  8. We need more benchmarks, Apple! by BoyHowdyAAF · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes, but when are they gonna test it against the other noble gases?

    Five bucks says Argon wipes the floor with the G5, :)

    1. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CONGRATULATIONS! Now should I make thinly veiled comments about DIGNITY, self-esteem and finding TRUE FUN in your RIGHT VENTRICLE??

    2. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 0

      Xeon is the name of a processor from Intel. Xenon is the name of the noble gas. But ignoring that minor flaw, it was a fabulous joke.

    3. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "Five bucks says Argon wipes the floor with the G5, :)"

      I've got my money on the Radon. Even a G5 can't beat a nuclear powered CPU, as long as trademark claims from ATI can be avoided ;-)

    4. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by kasparov · · Score: 1

      If you think Argon will kick it's ass, wait until Aragorn gets ahold of it.

      --
      There's no place I can be, since I found Serenity.
    5. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      It really needs to be tested against the Aron, Krion and Raon.

    6. Re:We need more benchmarks, Apple! by Psykechan · · Score: 1

      Not if you buy your G5 Mac with ATi's Radon video card.

  9. I don't know by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know if you can make the argument that "makes better use of dual CPUs" translates to "better performance at playing games." The few Opteron benchmarks I've seen have shown that it makes *much* better use of multiple CPU than the Xeons, but still lags behind single CPU system for game playing, due to the fact that dual CPUs provide little to no benefit in current games, and the SMP overhead actually reduces perfromance.

    1. Re:I don't know by Have+Blue · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Dual-processor macs have been shipping in one form or another for at least 3 years, and a number of game ports do explicitly take advantage of them. Also, the OS is smart enough to move things like sound and asynchronous OpenGL operations to the second processor for an automatic speedup.

    2. Re:I don't know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would it be possible to turn off the SMP overhead at runtime - migrating all the processes over to one of the processors, and then switching over to single processor mode? I'm thinking that it should be feasable for the same reasons that it possible to have hot swappable CPU's in SMP systems. Or are there issues that I'm not aware of that would make this unfeasable? Would adding this capability add more overhead than you gain?

      What would be especially cool is that it create a reason to bring back the turbo button! yyea!

    3. Re:I don't know by rsborg · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The few Opteron benchmarks I've seen have shown that it makes *much* better use of multiple CPU than the Xeons, but still lags behind single CPU system for game playing, due to the fact that dual CPUs provide little to no benefit in current games, and the SMP overhead actually reduces perfromance.

      Well, if you're still running Windows ME, then no amount of extra processors will help your game. And, yes... games need to be multithreaded/multiprocessed in order to get any benefits from dual-CPUs (other than if you happen to run background processes in the meanwhile, at the same time).

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    4. Re:I don't know by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      That seems to be a point many people miss. Many of the API's any app including games, use have the potential of using a second processor.

      Also, as far as I'm concerned, the days of running a single app at a time are over. I don't want to have to quit everything else just to play a game.

    5. Re:I don't know by SQLz · · Score: 1

      Also, just so everyone knows, Apple sucks, Intel Sucks, and so does Redhat and all FreeBSD.

    6. Re:I don't know by clf8 · · Score: 1

      Actually, OpenGL is offloaded to the graphics card, along with drawing pretty much anything else on the screen. Sure, it's mostly bogus eyecandy, but with Quartz Extreme at least not eating up your main processor with it like you do in Windows. Pretty sure I read Microsoft was working on this also, but Apple's got it now.

    7. Re:I don't know by Have+Blue · · Score: 2, Informative

      OpenGL still requires some grunt work on the processor. The GPU can't do things like prepare DMA sessions.

      Microsoft is working on a hardware-accelerated graphics system for Longhorn, due in 2005 or 2006.

    8. Re:I don't know by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      From what I've read of the latest Linux kernels (for the few decent games available) and Win 2K/XP, it should be possible to bind all network related tasks to a single CPU and leave the other focused on game play. This could be a real advantage to the huge group of online players.

    9. Re:I don't know by BancBoy · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, Apple has been shipping Dual Processor Macs for over 8 years. I don't know that it was the first, but the Power Mac 9500/180MP featured dual 180MHz 604 CPUs.

      --
      [UID-HeinzIntel]
    10. Re:I don't know by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      It wasn't first, Daystar's 4-CPU clone was first, but then they gave up on the concept for a while.

  10. On the flip side of that coin... by GeckoFood · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Their benchmarks won't mean a thing if there's a shortage of titles for the platform and everyone buys a PC anyway. I'd love to have one of these machines, I am sure I could find some cool things to do with it. But for the price of admission, there's not enough titles out there to make spending the extra $$$ on the hardware worth it.

    --
    Be excellent to each other. And... PARTY ON, DUDES!
    1. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also note that, now that Apple finally has a "Speedy" chip, they make no mention of the megahertz myth. Hmmm.

    2. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by protohiro1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well it runs everything I need, photoshop, maya, shake, Illustrator...I'm going to assume it also runs those apps very, very fast. Which is what I want.

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    3. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's if you buy your computer based on games.

      Personally, I don't even like 98% of the games released for the PC. They're mostly shitty first person shooters anyway. Instead, I got a gamecube. This provides just about as much games support as i could concievably want.

      It all depends on what you want to do with your computer. There was a point where I might have considered switching from OS X to Linux, but the fact is I liked the OS X Cocoa programming environment to the point that it was enough to keep me on the mac despite the fact i hated Aqua. If you like PC games enough you're willing to let that rule everythign else about how you use your power, okay, go for it.

      -- super ugly ultraman

    4. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by greengrocer · · Score: 2, Funny

      What titles do you need to see? I thought the only big gap was GIS software...

    5. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by MidKnight · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Are you talking about gaming titles? That is probably still the case, yes. But for any other type of software, this is just a FUD argument. In terms of being an everyday computer for the masses, it works excellently. In terms of being an everyday computer for a Java developer (my case), it beats the pants off of any other platform I've worked with.

      No, I can't play the newest PC game title, but I get plenty of gaming in on the PS2. And as a bonus, I get the warm-n-fuzzy moral feeling of not giving WinTel any of my hard-earned $$$ :)

      --Mid

    6. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can get them for $300 less if you are a student on Apple's Education Store (Anyone can buy from their online store.

    7. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And as a bonus, I get the warm-n-fuzzy moral feeling of not giving WinTel any of my hard-earned $$$"

      Hopefully that's offset by the nasty doing-the-wrong-thing feeling you get from owning a PS2.

      Sony are about as bad as you can get in terms of ill-inentions and attempting to keep the market closed, and they're quite happy to screw the environment over while they're at it.

    8. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by 1010011010 · · Score: 1


      MacOSX does need mapping software in a big way. I have an MSDN subscription (/me ducks thrown fruit), which comes with a MapPoint DVD. It's not a bad mapping program (better than StreetFinder, what a POS), although the GPS capabilities are only rudimentary. I'd like to see something like it on the Mac.

      I wonder if anyone has taken a crack at the MapPoint data file format...

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    9. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by DeadScreenSky · · Score: 1

      I know it is a Slashdot tradition not to read an article, but judging from the responses to your comment, this is the first time I have seen so many comments from people who didn't even read the summary. Only in an Apple article, right? :)

      Hint: the summary mentioned that the benchmarks showed the G5 would be good at games. The "titles" mentioned by the parent poster is referring to games. Hence, no one cares if you don't want a Mac to play a variety of games - that isn't the subject being talked about.

      --
      There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. -- Francis Bacon
    10. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're a fucking idiot

    11. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're a fucking idiot too

    12. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      They all exist on Windows, and runs faster and more cheap there, so if it is not the "mac experience"
      you want I think you better buy an AMD/Intel computer.

    13. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shake does not run on Windows now

    14. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is a shame, because they could use it to their advantage.

      If you read the article, you will notice how it is their dual-2GHz machine that compares favorably against the dual-3GHz Xeon.

    15. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny that Mac users often tout the superiority of their systems to those of x86 systems for anything graphical. It seems to me that more movie special effects are made using x86, HP and Sun solutions.

    16. Re:On the flip side of that coin... by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

      I am going to assume the AC is trolling, but I may as well respond: I didn't say it was superior. I prefer macs. And macs allow me to do the work I need to do as well as a pc. Movies studios are very different places then the workplaces of most artists (or our home offices). In an effect studio artists specialize. If I was a ful time 3d modeler, animator or Technical Director I could spend my days in Linux on x86, with no need for shake/combustion/after effects or photoshop or what have you.

      If I am building a render farm I just want a lot of CPU, cheap (sun render farms were common until recently, when linux intel clusters started to pull ahead in price/performance) In my work I don't have that luxury. I need to work in Maya, next to photoshop, and I need flash as well. My choice is between a mac or a wintel (currently much faster, but the g5 should change that). I also need to pop into Office to some typing or reading documents. Now, given the CHOICE. I can choose to work on a mac, which I find to be a much more pleasant experience. I like macs better. I also like building commodity pcs, and I like to play games on my pc as well. So I do run both, but I prefer to use a mac, especially considering it runs all the apps I need.

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
  11. yawn by virtual_mps · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Another apple benchmark that shows intel machines running strangely slower then everybody else's benchmarks, with even fewer details then the last time we read this story. Wake me up when there's a real independent review of the state-of-the art on both systems. I wouldn't mind seeing an opteron in the mix also.

    1. Re:yawn by dema · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Another X1 benchmark that shows X2 machines running strangely slower then everybody else's benchmarks.

      Replace X1 and X2 with any variable and the statement will still be true. Thanks to the Law of Marketing. (:

    2. Re:yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.veritest.com/clients/reports/apple/appl e_performance.pdf

      The mac used 1.5 GB of ram as seen on page 5

      dell used 2GB as seen at bottom of page 6

    3. Re:yawn by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

      First, I think this *IS* the same story as last time around, and the Reg is just slow on the uptake. So I'll be referring to the details of that.

      Second, the benchmarks were made with GCC. GCC is, if anything, better on x86 platforms and gives the Xeon the advantage. It's not nearly as good as a MetroWerks or Intel compiler, which Dell uses to benchmark their systems.

      See, Apple doesn't have a decent optimizing compiler yet. MW CodeWarrior will probably be good, but it's not modified yet for the G5. Apple has added in the G5 timings and stuff to GCC, but GCC's optimizations suck (getting better in GCC3.3, but still not great). High-end apps/games specifically for the G5 will be compiled with a good compiler, which should be out fairly soon (a month or two tops).

      So what they want right now, and what is most fair right now, is a comparison between the two processors, not compilers. This means that they have to use the *same* compilers on both systems. So they used GCC. Expect their SPECs to rise as they get better compilers for the Mac.

      --
      I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    4. Re:yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honesty = Flamebait?

      This is why I've been posting AC since '99

    5. Re:yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're kidding right?

      The last benchmarks Apple put out were on an platform that isn't shipping, on a OS that won't ship when the platform ships, using optimizations that can't be used for normal computing, with a compiler that has been specifically tweeked to provided even more performance VS a slower than the fastest currently shipping CPU on a middle of the road motherboard/chipset, with performance enhancing settings that are normally on, turned off, with an OS that doesn't ship with that system, placed out of the box onto that system using a generic compiler with minimal optimizations which altogether costs less.

      Apple marketing lies through its teeth. Compare their posted benchmarks of their own systems vs competitors benchmarks of their own systems and the new still not shipping Apple systems are slower than systems that have been shipping for months.

      Apple makes a nice OS and nice computer boxes, but they just aren't as fast as comparably priced Intel/AMD boxes. That's just the way it is.

    6. Re:yawn by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      Expect their SPECs to rise as they get better compilers for the Mac.

      Good for them. They should wait and compare to the existing SPEC numbers. If GCC on x86 gets 200 less on a SPEC benchmark than the Intel compiler, then it's quite obvious that GCC needs work.

      Still, that doesn't explain their Q3 scores, either, or most of their other benchmarks. Then again, the only benchmarks they give decent information on is the SPEC benchmarks, and that's because it's required in order for them to even publish the numbers. How does a P4 3.0 GHz running an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro suddenly get 275fps when Apple benchmarks it and 333fps when Sharky Extreme benchmarks it? Why is a video card benchmark even being used to say anything about a CPU (since Q3 scores change very little as CPU speeds increase, but change a great deal as video cards become more powerful)?

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    7. Re:yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... except that ISN'T the best comparison.

      The best comparison is to use the best compiler for each system, no matter what.

      If the PC has a compiler that performs much better on that hardware, tough. That's a real world fact.

      Likewise, if CodeWarrior is a better compiler.

      And this isn't a processor comparison. It's a platform comparison. And the compiler is essentially part of the platform.

    8. Re:yawn by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

      Given that the platform hasn't even shipped yet... I don't care whether *current* compilers support it better. Such a benchmark is *preliminary* by its very nature, and hobbling both machines to the same bad compiler is much better than extrapolating "effective" scores for "if we had a better compiler, it would look like..."

      For now, it *is* the best comparison.

      --
      I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    9. Re:yawn by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

      You're kidding right?

      Nope.

      The last benchmarks Apple put out were on an platform that isn't shipping, on a OS that won't ship when the platform ships,

      Hence they are preliminary. And the OS doesn't matter much for these specific benchmarks. Only the scheduler, TLB miss handler/pager and idle tasks really matter at all. Idle tasks would be minimal in any case; the schedulers are probably the same in both systems; and the TLB miss handler and pager wouldn't be involved on much on something which uses so little memory as these SPECs.

      using optimizations that can't be used for normal computing,

      No, but they (or similar optimizations) can be (and are) used for games, photoshop filters, rendering libraries, and other CPU-eaters.

      with a compiler that has been specifically tweeked to provided even more performance

      No, they just added the timing specs and stuff so that it could optimize for the G5 at all. They didn't add any better optimization than it does for any other platform.

      VS a slower than the fastest currently shipping CPU on a middle of the road motherboard/chipset,

      It was Dell's flagship at the time.

      with performance enhancing settings that are normally on, turned off,

      That allegation turned out to be just plain false. They did not turn of SSE2, and they ran the tests both with and without hyperthreading and reported the fastest ones.

      with an OS that doesn't ship with that system, placed out of the box onto that system using a generic compiler with minimal optimizations

      It was the same compiler with the same optimizations, up to platform-specific stuff. If you call this cheating, fine, but I think that until the decent compilers (eg MetroWerks) have optimization settings for G5, this is the about fairest they can do.

      which altogether costs less.

      True. Apple's systems are fricking expensive.

      Apple marketing lies through its teeth.

      Everyone's marketing lies through their teeth. They benchmarks may not have been completely fair, but I'm willing to believe that they are close to fair, which is better than I could say for Apple's old "PhotoShop suite" benchmarks.

      Compare their posted benchmarks of their own systems vs competitors benchmarks of their own systems and the new still not shipping Apple systems are slower than systems that have been shipping for months.

      See above comment about preliminary benchmarks and no good compilers.

      Apple makes a nice OS and nice computer boxes, but they just aren't as fast as comparably priced Intel/AMD boxes. That's just the way it is.

      Some other slashdotter did a price comparison on this. He compared it against a home-built dual Opteron system with as close as possible to the same parts.

      If you include their case (which would not be cheap on a PC either), hard drive, graphics card, DVD burner, RAM, and some of the other features of their chipsets, it turns out to be pretty comparable. Slightly (~20%) more expensive than if you were to build a comparable system from parts, but then systems custom-built from parts are cheaper anyway (because you are doing the labor). Plus, the Mac comes with an OS.

      --
      I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    10. Re:yawn by li99sh79 · · Score: 1
      Apple marketing lies through its teeth.

      So in other words it's a marketing department.

      But seriously, the G5 looks like it's going to be fast enough to make the speed differential negligible.

      -sam

      --
      I was just here, where did I go?
    11. Re:yawn by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 2, Informative
      Wake me up when there's a real independent review of the state-of-the art on both systems.
      According to the article, "Apple engaged VeriTest to perform the benchmarks." That doesn't necessarily mean that the results are independent, but I would imagine that it helped.
    12. Re:yawn by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 1

      The numbers Apple got as STILL low for GCC, at least for the interger side of things (I haven't seen many numbers for CFP using GCC). Generally speaking, GCC is only about 5-10% slower than Intel's C compiler for x86, Apple's numbers are 20-25% lower.

      Basically these benchmarks are a load of marketing crap. The IBM PowerPC 970/G5 is a perfectly fine chip, but it's definitely NOT the fastest PC processor in the world, not by a long shot. This is just another case of the "Steve Jobs Reality Distortion Field" in action.

    13. Re:yawn by virtual_mps · · Score: 1

      No, a benchmark sponsored by a vendor isn't particularly independent.

  12. Heat? by jabberjaw · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Would anyone who happens to be lucky enough to own a G5 like to comment on how much heat it puts out in comparison to say, a Xenon? Just looking at the case is seems as if Apple has taken great care to make it as quiet, as well as cool, however it seems that there is a lot of space in that case.

    1. Re:Heat? by avalys · · Score: 1, Funny

      How much heat does a Xenon put out? Well, not much, since those noble gases are so unreactive and all...

      (hint: the Intel processor is a Xeon!)

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    2. Re:Heat? by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      My friend has a G4, and there's a lot of space in that one, too. Apple designs tend to very often have very open designs with pleanty of empty space.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    3. Re:Heat? by nolife · · Score: 1

      Apple designs tend to very often have very open designs with pleanty of empty space.

      Kind of like the Mac section in computer stores. ;)

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    4. Re:Heat? by cheesekeeper · · Score: 1

      The 1.6 GHz I've seen is cool to the touch and very quiet. In fact, when I stepped up to it, the front processor fan was off and the read processor fans were on a low speed. After playing with it a bit, the front fan started to calmly rotate. I imagine it's very quiet, but I couldn't tell over the din of the mall.

      Check one out at your local Apple Store

      --

      Best read in good ol' Monaco 9 point.

    5. Re:Heat? by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 1

      LOL!

      Don't forget the Cube and the iMacs, Lots of wasted space in those bad boys.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    6. Re:Heat? by smadnessness · · Score: 2, Informative

      At WWDC I had the lucky opportunity to test the G5s with a few apps. Yes, Apple claims that the machine is dead quiet, and it *can* be, when using less than a tenth of the CPU. When I sat down I could hear no noise at all, but after I started playing with the Dock the fan started kicking in, blowing cool air out the back. I launched one of my apps that uses almost all available CPU power and after ten seconds the fans were full blast. This thing heats up fast, and the fans, although still relatively quiet, were chugging hot air out that case faster than anything I've seen.

      I think the space inside is necessary for all that air throughput, as well as some of the plastics inside that direct airflow. This was not designed to be an iMac... while it is sleak, it's not something to be displayed on top of your desk. It's certainly large and loud enough to be put on the floor, and I don't think the people using this professionally will mind the noise (or the size). If you want a quiet, stylish performance, get an iMac.

      rock on

      --
      ==========
      support the arts!
      www.smadness.com
    7. Re:Heat? by Rand+Race · · Score: 5, Informative

      Don't own one yet, but a 400 MHz Xeon dissipates 40 watts or so and the latest 3 GHz plus models poke above 100 watts, a 3.2 GHz P4 dissapates around 85 watts, while a PPC970 at 1.6 GHz dissipates 40 or so watts while the dual 2GHz racks up about 95 watts alltogether.

      --
      Insanity is the last line of defence for the master diplomat. But you have to lay the groundwork early.
    8. Re:Heat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a lot of space in the case.

      Also there is judicious use of heat pipes

      If you take a look at this picture you can see the cooling on the rear of the motherboard, which is in contact with the entire aluminum left hand side of the case.

      I can say for one that the G5 demo units are silent in a room full of people talking quietly. I couldn't hear the noise from them unless I pressed my ear right to the side of the case while one was on. Using the ten (?) fans all at a mild speed really keeps the noise down.

    9. Re:Heat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 400Mhz Xeon is not a modern Xeon. Xeons are all based off of respective Pentium cores. A 400Mhz Xeon is based on a PII core, while a 3Ghz model is based on the PIV core. Comparing or extrapolating on their heat output when you are comparing processors of different cores will tell you nothing.

  13. SMP gaming by mcgroarty · · Score: 4, Interesting
    the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.

    On the PC, very very few games take advantage of SMP. DirectX itself seems to make zero effort, and games seem to be starting the draw from the same thread that runs the rest of the game logic. At best, you benefit a little (almost immeasurably) on I/O handling or some of the audio processing.

    Since SMP is more pervasive on Mac than on PC, do Mac games take more advantage of SMP? Does GL on the Mac render retained mode data outside of the calling thread or otherwise significantly distribute game-related work in the OS itself?

    1. Re:SMP gaming by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 4, Funny

      I agree. I would hope that with the advent (and hopefully proliferation) of 64-bit and SMP desktops, the extra processing power can be devoted to better AI. I would *love* to play against a computer opponent that requires an entire CPU to plan its moves and strategy. Get to work, software writers! Oh wait, that's me.

    2. Re:SMP gaming by Krach42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      PCs, and actually, more specifically Windows suck at SMP. I have a dual Pentium3 800MHz system, and Windows insists on splitting as much time as possible between the two CPUs. Thus, even if I have one and only one thread running (say, Anarchy Online) it still splits it onto two processors.

      This achieves no speed advantage, and anyone who's taken any class talking about caches, would understand why it'd be generally good to leave the task on a single CPU for at least a second or two.

      In Linux, my computer performs tons better, never "locks up" waiting on I/O. (Which is stupid of Windows, because I have two CPUs) And tasks generally split processors, but only occationally... as in, I can watch them wander back and forth.

      I've still yet to compile my multi-threaded raytracer for Windows, so I personally can't compare the speed one way or the other for real.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    3. Re:SMP gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I saw a Mac game on the clearence shelf at Woolworths. Oh wait, that was for Colecovision.

    4. Re:SMP gaming by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Thus, even if I have one and only one thread running (say, Anarchy Online) it still splits it onto two processors.

      Have you tried setting the cpu affinity in the task manager? Supposedly you can do that to make processes run on just one processor.

    5. Re:SMP gaming by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I do do this. It does help. But I need to do it everytime it starts. It's possible to set bits in the executable that will mask out some CPUs, but this alters the executable, and all the games with copy-protection/virus-protection, what-have-you, (Anarchy Online included here) will detect this as a "corruption" and "fix" the problem... or just not work.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    6. Re:SMP gaming by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 4, Informative
      Since SMP is more pervasive on Mac than on PC, do Mac games take more advantage of SMP? Does GL on the Mac render retained mode data outside of the calling thread or otherwise significantly distribute game-related work in the OS itself?

      Most Mac games are not specifically written to take advantage of SMP. However, OS X (which is required for a G5) is pervasively multithreaded, and distributes the load among multiple processors very well. Any thread can run on any processor, as needed.

      So, if a game is multithreaded it will use both processors. The graphics system under OS X is multithreaded, so it can use both processors. (And for that matter, the graphics card as well; Quartz Extreme offloads quite a bit of processing that way.) Basically any system call is likely to be done in a separate thread, and two threads should never take running time from each other.

      As a real-word example EV Nova (one of my favorite games, so I'm plugging them.) runs much faster on my dual 867MHz MDD Mac than my uncle's 1GHz iMac, without being 'designed for' SMP. (I wish I had a real benchmark for you though.) The OS takes care of that.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    7. Re:SMP gaming by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "On the PC, very very few games take advantage of SMP. DirectX itself seems to make zero effort, and games seem to be starting the draw from the same thread that runs the rest of the game logic. At best, you benefit a little (almost immeasurably) on I/O handling or some of the audio processing."

      I would expect that DirectX would expect to have the graphics card take care of all those issues. Since when did any modern 3D rendering use the CPU as opposed to a GPU?

      And now with modern audio cards that have built in DSPs and dolby digital encoders (heh, my motherboard has this) the dual processing CPUs shouldn't be highly utilised for multimedia in games. I would, however, expect them to be used a lot for AI and other things that don't simply rely on DirectX., OpenGL, EAC, Dolby, etc.

    8. Re:SMP gaming by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "PCs, and actually, more specifically Windows suck at SMP. I have a dual Pentium3 800MHz system, and Windows insists on splitting as much time as possible between the two CPUs. Thus, even if I have one and only one thread running (say, Anarchy Online) it still splits it onto two processors."

      Have you seen this free GPL SMP SeeSaw tool? It can let you manually balance CPU loads in dual cpu windows machines.

    9. Re:SMP gaming by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to be rude in any way, but what difference is this tool from using the Task Manager to set process affinity?

      And anyways, it still doesn't fix the fundamental problem that WinXP (and probably earlier versions) likes to run single processes on as many CPUs as possible.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    10. Re:SMP gaming by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "I don't mean to be rude in any way, but what difference is this tool from using the Task Manager to set process affinity?"

      Actually I wouldn't know ... I have never used a dual processor windows machine in recent memory. (But I have used multiprocessor unix machines in the job many times.) Perhaps the tool I pointed out is redundant.

    11. Re:SMP gaming by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      Hm... well, they say it's better, I'll give it a go, and let you know.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    12. Re:SMP gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your 2,000 line masterpieces make you the world's greatest software engineer.

    13. Re:SMP gaming by afidel · · Score: 1

      It's called processor affinity, look into it, like all SMP aware OS's windows supports it.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    14. Re:SMP gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What?

    15. Re:SMP gaming by mbbac · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, some Mac games are SMP enabled.

      --

      mbbac

    16. Re:SMP gaming by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Apple should decree that all gaming for Macs should be certified to run better with SMP...perhaps create an incentive program for designers/publishers to take advantage of this... Come to think of it, Microsoft could do the same in the PC marketplace. This would be a great reason to move up to WinXP Pro...

      --
      "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
    17. Re:SMP gaming by pod · · Score: 1

      Hmm, that's certainly strange behaviour... when I'm encoding an mp3 on my dual P3 1GHz, I only see 1 CPU nailed, there's no 'load balancing' happening. When I'm encoding a DivX, the load jumps around both CPUs. Gee, what do you suppose is happening there? I have no complaints about SMP on Windows. FWIW Win2000 feels much more solid and is more responsive on a dual system, and I never notice any weird stuff happening because there are 2 CPUs as opposed to 1. The only exception being the shitty Audigy drivers which will skip and glitch every few minutes.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    18. Re:SMP gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a interesting standpoint, and I agree that I'd like to see something like that myself. But Apple doesn't like incentive/certification programs of any kind for some reason, unlike Microsoft. At least, I don't know about Apple doing stuff like that.

    19. Re:SMP gaming by parker2222 · · Score: 1

      Liar. Windows does NOT and NEVER HAS split threads. Typical Slashdot moron lying about Windows.

    20. Re:SMP gaming by g_lightyear · · Score: 1

      Even with nothing else optimized, SMP will get used by CoreAudio when mixing audio for playback, the OS itself for most of its non-critical operations, and *some* housekeeping. Audio processing can take up 5-15% CPU; so for games that push the job of doing the mix themselves over to CoreAudio when ported, tis' a done deal. Other games have more specific optimizations. Shadowbane, for example, regularly uses 100% of the main cpu for rendering plus up to 100% of the second cpu when loading/generating terrain, LOD processing, or processing textures. There were modifications to the Q3 engine to use SMP; UT, even though it's not heavily MP, gets a 5-10 fps boost from having the second CPU around to offload music decoding to, and some OpenAL implementations will happily use the second CPU. As more HT games come out on the PC, more games will see a benefit from true MP on Xeon/Opteron systems and their dual-cpu G4/G5 counterparts on the mac. So the answer is... sort of. Some things do use SMP transparently - but not enough to utilize both CPUs to 100% unless the game has been designed that way; even then, as GL isn't generally used from multiple threads simultaneously to render your screen, the *framerate* is basically limited to a single CPU's performance in the render thread; the more CPU time you can give to the render thread, and the more you can remove from render and put into some other thread, the more your framerate improves.

      --
      -- A mind is a terrible thing.
  14. Is this a Hardware or OS test? by The+Prophet+Jesse · · Score: 1

    What is really being tested here, I would imaging the test has to run on some OS, but how much is this benchmark effected by the OS?

    1. Re:Is this a Hardware or OS test? by Squidgee · · Score: 1
      I doubt any of it; it's probably a pure-hardware test, or at least I would -think- it would be.

      Probably uses its own environment (bootable) for the test; that way, everything is consistent. I could be wrong, though.

    2. Re:Is this a Hardware or OS test? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      SPEC CPU basically doesn't use the OS, so OSes have no effect on the results.

  15. WTF? Um, old?! by DAQ42 · · Score: 2, Informative

    These are the same numbers that have been up on Apple's G5 site for how long now? Since June or something? What are you people? Blind? Or just lazy. Wake me up when you get with the present. People have been arguing the validity and what not of these SPEC scores represent for months now.

    --
    Don't Ask Questions. I don't know the answers and even if I did I wouldn't tell you.
  16. All I need...... by trompete · · Score: 0, Redundant

    now is to be able to play Battlefield 1942 on OS X/Motorolla. I really like the OS X window manager and the fact that I wouldn't have to patch my system every time a new worm came out for wintel.
    Is there some sort of free product like Wine for running wintel software on OS X?

    1. Re:All I need...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      two IA-32 emulators but both need a lot of work

      bochs

      qemu

    2. Re:All I need...... by Adm1n · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, yes let's call up transmeta and get them to make a code morpher x86-64 to RISC. Hmm this will be good.

  17. Games? by Gothmolly · · Score: 0, Troll

    Except that of course, nobody makes games for Apple. Wait, I hear that Duke Nukem 3D is going to be released in a special SMP-enhanced, G5-only version!!!

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:Games? by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 1

      What I heard was that Duke Nukem Forever was only going to appear on Windows if it had already appeared on Apple and Linux two months previously.

      I suspect that was the an example of Godel sentence marketing: that statement is true, but is certainly unprovable.

    2. Re:Games? by Dav3K · · Score: 5, Informative

      Nice troll. I can't believe you were moderated UP as interesting. Here's a very small list:
      - SimCity 4 - released for Apple
      - America's Army - released for Apple
      - Dungeon Seige - released for Apple
      - Neverwinter Nights - released for Apple
      - Warrior Kings - released for Apple
      - Warcraft III - released for Apple
      - Master of Orion - released for Apple
      - Unreal Tournament 2003 - released for Apple
      - The Sims - released for Apple
      - Quake III Arena - released for Apple
      - Civilization III - released for Apple


      Obviously the list goes on. So there are more games released for the PC. It could be said that there are even more games released for the console market. It seems to me though that games that tend to be commercially viable tend to be ported to the Mac. So next time you want to troll, please, at least have a specific gripe instead of spouting off on something you couldn't care to look into.

    3. Re:Games? by Jord · · Score: 1

      How is this comment interesting? There are a large number of games for Apple if you even bother to pull your head out and look around:

      MacSoft
      Ambrosia Software

      Just to name a few. Try looking around instead of spreading this crap. There are more games for the PC than Apple but that does NOT mean there are no games for OSX at all. Some of the best games are available on Apple (Unreal Tournament 2k3, Dungeon Siege, Neverwinter Nights, Masters of Orion, etc.)

      Of course in my opinion, if you want video games, buy a playstation, but that is just me.

    4. Re:Games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duke Nukem 3D, that's a little old don't you think?

    5. Re:Games? by heXXXen · · Score: 1

      Everyone always tries to list all the mac games that ARE available, how about a couple that ARE NOT:

      Half Life
      Battlefield 1942
      Half Life 2 (almost certainly will not see a mac port)

      I rest my case.

    6. Re:Games? by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      Of course in my opinion, if you want video games, buy a playstation, but that is just me.

      Actually I've found that consoles really suck for games. They are all basically the same thing with different graphics. PCs on the other hand have much more interesting games. You'd never see Battlefield 1942 on a console for example.

    7. Re:Games? by lamz · · Score: 1, Informative

      With 90+% of the people running PC's, PC's will be where the games are found.

      I've seen this argument presented hundreds, if not thousands of times, and it is high-time that someone deconstructs it.

      Sometimes, percentages are a good measure, such as in elections. However, in other situations, they make no sense at all. Just because 90% of X is using Platform A, and only 10% of X is using Platform B does not mean that someone producing games for Platform B is going to lose money.

      The real question here is: Is there sufficient demand for Mac games? The answer is yes, and there are new titles coming out all the time. Are the games you want to play available for Macs? That's subjective, and you are free to decide for yourself.

      Here's another reason why that argument doesn't hold water -- the PC hasn't always been the dominant game platform. In the 70s, PCs didn't exist yet, and all the games were for Apples, Commodores, Ataris, and various other game platforms. (By PCs, I'm referring to what used to be called IBM clones, and are now more accurately called Wintel boxes.)

      In the 80s, the PC arrived and soon became the most popular computer platform, but games were still predominantly available only for Commodore Amigas, Atari STs, as well as various Nintendo and Sega platforms. (At the time, PC owners would often smugly contend that their machines were superior business machines, and that games were frivolous and superfluous. Now Mac owners use the same argument.)

      It wasn't until the 90s that PCs began to dominate the game industry, and even today PC owners have to wait for ports from dedicated game platforms!

      --

      Mike van Lammeren
      It will challenge your head, your brain, and your mind.

    8. Re:Games? by Jord · · Score: 1
      And what case are you resting? The fact that three games you like are not available on Apple? Here is a tip, they are not available on other platforms as well. Complain to the manufacturer of the game and get that changed!

      The fact is there are a large number of games available for the Mac. No not all games are available and no one is even claiming that. But to make the blanket statement that there are NO games for the Mac is just plain wrong.

    9. Re:Games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow the games you like arent there. i guess that means everyone should ban the platform. cry me a river.

    10. Re:Games? by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      It wasn't until the 90s that PCs began to dominate the game industry, and even today PC owners have to wait for ports from dedicated game platforms!

      It may not have been until the 90s, but the current game publishers and developers have a strong tendency to develop for the largest possible market first. A few developers that are used to and can justify multi-platform development will do it simultaneously, or port quickly afterwards, but these are still very few.

      As for the dedicated game platforms (commonly refered to as consoles), this is exactly why I slowed down my purchases of graphics cards after the GeForce 2 and instead bought a console when I would have bought a card. I now have a GeForce 4 (having skipped the GF3 cards and all of the GF2 upgrades), a Dreamcast, PS2, XBox, and GameCube. I can now play all but .01% of games (those made only for Mac OS and non-Intel platforms, since most *nix games will run on *BSD or Linux which can be installed on my Intel box for no monetary cost) on one of 5 systems. Oh, and most of the games I play on consoles just don't tend to translate well to PCs anyway (because they're designed for gamepads and/or multiplayer-on-one-screen).

      Now, as far why the PC became the dominant gaming platform (outside of consoles) that it is today: it all came down to a handful of games that pushed the hardcore gaming crowd to the PC. My father owned an Apple IIgs, but bought a 4x86 after he saw Wolfenstein3D and Doom (and it helped that the company he worked for was moving to Wintel and MS Word/Excel, though he's rarely done work at home). Not to mention that since that time both the Windows/x86 PC and gaming have become even bigger businesses than they were in the early 90s, and the two industries grew together.

      If multiplatform or alternative platform gaming continue to grow, then we'll probably see more multiplatform games, but for now there are only two things that can really cause a shift in which platform (of computers) gets the most games: one (or a handful of) major must-have game(s) coming out on one alternative platform, or some other catalyst causing a shift to another platform in terms of market share. This is the same reason that console market share is so important to so many gamers: the platform with the largest audience gets the games. Of course, as multi-console development and PCconsole ports become more common, it may also become more common to see developers trying to get games out on multiple PC platforms, too.

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    11. Re:Games? by cosmo7 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, but what about shitty games? You know, the ones that give you that sinking feeling when you realize that your impulse purchase was a mistake. Most of those don't get ported to the Mac.

      Apple needs to reach out to the mediocre and uninspired developers. Churning out another lame wargame with soldiers who dance like puppets when they talk? On x86 there are thirty competing titles, but only two or three on the Mac! Contract-publishing a tedious racing game with no charm or originality? Mac users are waiting for you!

    12. Re:Games? by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      > Obviously the list goes on
      Why?
      >It could be said that there are even more games
      >released for the console market
      Yes, but that would not be the truth
      >It seems to me though that games that tend to be
      >commercially viable tend to be ported to the Mac
      I think that sentence do speak for itself.

    13. Re:Games? by dumbArtMajor · · Score: 1

      Also:

      Tony Hawk 4
      Tom Clancy Ghost Recon
      Aliens Vs Predator 2
      Soldier Of Fortune 2
      NOLF 2
      Tiger Woods 2003
      Bloodrayne

      and coming soon:
      Halo
      Splinter Cell
      Doom 3

    14. Re:Games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      They're available for Windows machines.

      HL came out for the PS2.

      Battlefield and HL2 are coming for the Xbox.

      Of course, in all cases, the PC version's the best of the bunch.

      He's just pointing out that many of the best-of-breed games aren't available on the Mac. And he has a point.

      If you're a gamer who prefers a computer to a console, the choice is simple.

      Windows PC.

    15. Re:Games? by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      >> Obviously the list goes on
      >Why?

      Because most of us have the brain cells to look it up if we are interested in what else is out there, and obviously there are more games out there considering how long the mac platform has been around.

      http://www.apple.com/games/

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    16. Re:Games? by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      Were all those games released at the same time as the PC version or did you have to wait for a while? Last year's titles are on sale at Best Buy for $10-$20. Does the Mac get those great last year prices if the port takes longer? These are questions and not flames.

    17. Re:Games? by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      "Yes, but what about shitty games? You know, the ones that give you that sinking feeling when you realize that your impulse purchase was a mistake. Most of those don't get ported to the Mac."

      Besides Blizzard titles how do you know if the game will be good or not? Its like movies, everyone wants their movie to be one of the top 10 of the year but that doesn't mean it will be. It takes lot of crap to finally get a great title. So do apple ports correctly predict which great titles are coming out and port them over? Should I only buy PC games that were ported?

      Also, were the ports done at the same time or after the game rocked? I could wait a year on every game for the PC before I bought it to determine if it rocked or not but I prefer not to. Perhaps Mac buyers don't mind waiting for the ports but thats not hardcore gaming at all.

    18. Re:Games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, those games are hella old.

      As for your comment on which games are "commercially viable" (by which I assume you mean "not crappy"), I like to make that decision on my own, thank you. There are games that got horrible reviews which I found quite good. Reviews are nothing more than opinions and I would not enjoy having any company basically dictate which games I can and cannot play simply because they weren't "commercially viable".

    19. Re:Games? by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      On average now, the wait is about 3 months difference, though many games (espeisaly those by blizzard) tend to be released at the same time or within weeks of each other.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  18. The word for today is Auger" by nurb432 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Who ever said you cant learn something by reading slashdot..

    Your goal today is to use the 'word of the day' at least 10 times today.

    Tomrrow's word will be....

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:The word for today is Auger" by agallagh42 · · Score: 1

      At least you could spell the word of the day correctly. It's "Augur", not Auger.

      --
      Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
  19. Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by Megor1 · · Score: 1

    After seeing the benchmarks for the G5's and AMD opterons I'm not really blown away by the speed, in most cases they are slower than todays 32 bit cpus. While the programs they are running are mostly 32 bit, I still don't see the need to upgrade unless you really need to have more memory (Ie CAD people and real big servers). It will be weird to keep the same cpu for 2 years...

    --
    Everyone that disagrees with me is a paid shill
    1. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by lamz · · Score: 1

      It will be weird to keep the same cpu for 2 years...

      Then this will blow your mind -- I have averaged 4.5 years for my last 3 Macs.

      --

      Mike van Lammeren
      It will challenge your head, your brain, and your mind.

    2. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by Jord · · Score: 3, Informative

      64bit != faster. Why must people always assume (especially on /. where you are supposed to be technically inclined) think that 64bit MUST be faster than 32bit.

      However, having said that, you do realize that this is comparing a 2Ghz G5 setup to a 3Ghz Intel rig right? So even if they came out equal the G5 is faster per Ghz?

    3. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by gte910h · · Score: 1

      I've always seen 64 bit processors to be applicable for more scientific tasks than anything else.

      I guess you do have a point about how useful they can be in a memory needy situation, but really, what use ARE the double sized words to most programmers?

      --
      Want to see every step I took to start my company? http://www.rowdylabs.com/blogs/pitchtothegods
    4. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      >However, having said that, you do realize that this is comparing
      >a 2Ghz G5 setup to a 3Ghz Intel rig right? So even if they came
      >out equal the G5 is faster per Ghz?

      Stop it. Stop it now. Enough with the clueless processor MHz arguments. Please. Processor frequency is not a performance measure. It's not really even worth mentioning except in a "a 1500Mhz athlon in faster than a 1100MHz athlon" context. Beyond that, IT HAS NO MEANING.

    5. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by Jord · · Score: 1

      Exactly who is clueless? comparing Mhz to Mhz is useless no one is arguing that point. But when you compare how much is done per Mhz then you start to get some useful data. The only useful data is comparing how much each processor (or rig in this case) does per clock cycle which is what I was referring to.

    6. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      But what use is comparing the work done per cycle? It's not a performance comparison in any way. All it tells you is the architectural decision made by the processor's designers.

      Basically, the more work each stage in a processor does per cycle, the lower the maximum clock speed the processor can run at (everything else being equal). The P4 architecture has a huge long pipeline and so each stage is simple and doesn't do much per cycle. This allows it to scale to very high frequencies without much difficulty. The G5 does more per cycle, but that means it is more difficult to scale upwards in frequency. Hence the vaguely similar performance.

      It's basically a trade off between MHz and instructions per cycle. You could have a processor that does 1 million instructions per cycle, but that's not much use if it can only run at 1Hz maximum.

    7. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      what use ARE the double sized words to most programmers?

      Nothing.

      But to memory and drive manufacturers, its money in the bank.

    8. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by FryGuy1013 · · Score: 1

      And what's your point? AMD's Athlon XP 3000+ are clocked at 2.2Ghz (I think), and run equivilantly to a 3Ghz Intel.

      And in all actuality 64bit compiting is slower than 32bit computing because in order to transfer the address of a single location in memory, you have to send 64 bits instead of just 32. Since memory is being read or written to a lot, this adds up.

      --
      bananas like monkeys.
    9. Re:Anyone else finding 64 bit cpus disappointing? by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 1

      This is only marginally useful from a purely academic standpoint. In the real world, there are only two measures that are important: Highest maximum performance regardless of cost and performance for a given price point. How you get that performance, be it by higher clock speed or more work per clock is rather meaningless.

      It's strange to see some people seeing a 2.0GHz G5 performing comperable to a 3.0GHz P4 (at least when Apple pays someone to do the benchmarks) and somehow assume that this means anything, or worse yet that somehow IBM/Apple are magically going to come out with a 3.0GHz PowerPC 970. This chip will NEVER make it to 3.0GHz on a 130nm fab process. It MIGHT manage to clock that high on a 90nm fab process, but I wouldn't even hold my breath for that if I were you. The P4 was designed to be able to clock high, which is why it's clocked at 3.2GHz on the same sort of fab process that has every other chip maxing out in the 1.5-2.5GHz range (I think AMD has the next fastest 130nm main processor at ~2.2GHz).

  20. Games? by sterno · · Score: 1

    Yes, games would be good on such a box if the vast majority of games were released to run on said box. With 90+% of the people running PC's, PC's will be where the games are found.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  21. Real benchamarks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't the chaosmint show a bit of a different story from a real user?

  22. Time magazine ad by civilengineer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In 'Time' magazine they have an ad every week on page 2, and this week it says the numbers are 16.9 against 16.7 for integer calculations and 15.8 against 11.1 for floating point calculations compared to a dual 3.06 GHz Xeon.

    --

    New year Resolution: Don't change sig this year
  23. MAC games? by The+Prophet+Jesse · · Score: 3, Funny

    what? : )

    1. Re:MAC games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shows how much you know. :p
      Any of the worth while games are ported to the Mac
      http://www.apple.com/games/

    2. Re:MAC games? by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      Except my Anarchy Online! :(

      I have just about every game that I want to play on Linux and Mac, but I still have to have Windows for my AO Fix.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    3. Re:MAC games? by zulux · · Score: 0

      "MAC Games" involveve stealing someones network card MAC address and watching the fun.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    4. Re:MAC games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Any of the worth while games are ported to the Mac

      I seem to be missing Half-Life and Battlefield 1942. Anything else is fluff. BF1942 is da fuxing r0x0r l0l0l0l!

  24. Xeon != Xenon [nt] by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

    no text

    --
    I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    1. Re:Xeon != Xenon [nt] by BoyHowdyAAF · · Score: 1

      You're right. Whoops. I guess I need more conffee.

    2. Re:Xeon != Xenon [nt] by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      I guess I need more conffee.

      Apparently, you do :-)

    3. Re:Xeon != Xenon [nt] by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Know someone with . in their path?
      echo "#!/bin/rm -f" > cat; chmod a+x cat


      % echo $PATH /bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin::.
      % echo "#!/bin/rm -f" > cat; chmod a+x cat
      % cat cat
      #!/bin/rm -f

      What's your point? Maybe you mean someone with . prepended to their path, not just in it.

  25. In other news by rnd() · · Score: 5, Funny

    Apple has issued a new release of the "Fastest Personal Computer" advertisement. The ad now reads "#1 Personal Computer Alphabetically". In a statement to the press, Apple CEO Steve Jobbs said, "Our engineers are considering alternative spellings such as Aaple in order to insure that we maintain this exciting edge in the Personal Computer marketplace."

    --

    Amazing magic tricks

    1. Re:In other news by scrod · · Score: 1

      Amiga already has them beat at that game!

    2. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple's stock market symbol IS aapl!

    3. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that was Commodore, wasn't it?

    4. Re:In other news by d0n+quix0te · · Score: 1

      Heh, Aacorn Computers beat them to it in the UK :)

    5. Re:In other news by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

      AAPL is already their stock symbol!

    6. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not any more.

    7. Re:In other news by Zebra_X · · Score: 1

      Apple has already taken advantage of this effect with their NASDAQ stock ticker symbol "AAPL".

    8. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Acorn!!!

  26. OS Bias by dlosey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Could it be that the the operating system plays a role in the results? With data that close, can it really be conclusively said that the Apple hardware is faster?

    Windows never really has been that efficient in a dual processor situation.

    1. Re:OS Bias by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

      There should be some bias, but not much; mostly it should be interference from the scheduler. These apps don't use much memory, so TLB misses and stuff shouldn't matter.

      Windows never really has been that efficient in a dual processor situation.

      IIRC they ran Linux on the Xeons. At least, they did in the original tests. Are these actually new?

      --
      I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    2. Re:OS Bias by gte910h · · Score: 1

      Well its platform you have to look at. If you're choosing between Apple/PPC and Windows/I64, then you mark those. But if you're going to be running linux, then these benchmarks are incomplete.

      --
      Want to see every step I took to start my company? http://www.rowdylabs.com/blogs/pitchtothegods
    3. Re:OS Bias by mj_1903 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think Windows has the bias here as it was designed from scratch for x86 hardware. Mac OS X on the other hand was not designed for PPC and in fact is hardly efficient on the PPC. If they were to make it more efficient, it would remove the ability for Apple to easily recompile and make minor changes to the kernel to allow it to run on other hardware.

    4. Re:OS Bias by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think Windows has the bias here as it was designed from scratch for x86 hardware.

      Sorry, the first version of Windows NT was running on a non-x86 RISC architecture (don't remember if it was 68k or Alpha). The ability to port NT quickly to other platforms is part of why the Intel 64-bit CPUs were supported fairly quickly by Win2k, and why NT4 supported Alpha and PPC processors for quite a while (though those versions were eventually phased out due to lack of sales/interest).

      http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/server/eval ua tion/news/fromms/kanoarchitect.asp
      (interview with two of the original developers of the NT kernel)

      "We tested ourselves by not doing the x86 version first. We did the RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Computing) stuff first. It would have been so easy to drop the RISC support; everyone in the company wanted to. But the only way to achieve portability is to develop for more than one platform at a time. It cost us a lot to keep portability alive, but we did, and that has made it easy for us to respond to things like Merced," he says, referring to the 64-bit chip from Intel.

      "We tried to create a system that had a good, solid design, as opposed to one that would run optimally on hardware of the time," Cutler explains. "When we started, we were working on 386/20's. At the time that was a big, honking machine. Since our design had to be portable, we didn't allow people to optimize code in assembly language, which is hardware specific. This was hard for the Microsoft mentality at the time. Everyone wanted to optimize code in assembler."

      The original vision kept the operating system nimble. "We didn't embed operating-system semantics into the kernel," Cutler explains. "So when we switched from OS/2 to Windows, we didn't take a major hit. If we had built OS/2 threading or signals into the kernel, we would have been in trouble. Instead we built the OS in layers and created subsystems to handle OS/2, Windows, and POSIX."

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    5. Re:OS Bias by mbbac · · Score: 1

      They used Red Hat on their first set of benchmarks (for the Intel machines) because it outperformed Windows on their tests.

      --

      mbbac

    6. Re:OS Bias by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 1

      For the SPEC scores, the operating system plays virtually no role at all, however the compiler plays a major role. Here is where Apple really loses out, because the Mac compilers are no where near as good as compilers for x86, so even if Apple had a chip that was as fast it would not run applications as fast.

      Of course, the data really isn't that close if you look at REAL results as opposed to what Apple paid some company to find. The scores that Apple showed for the x86 systems are WAY lower than what anyone else would get for an x86 system. The G5 is a fine chip, but it's only marginally faster than a P4 clock for clock. A 2.0GHz G5 would give you comperable performance to a 2.4GHz P4 with an 800MHz bus speed or possibly a slightly higher clocked P4 on a slower bus.

      As for dual-processors, part of the problem is that Intel's implementation for SMP isn't so hot. The dual-Xeon systems use a shared multi-drop bus, which isn't a particularly good design these days. AMD's Opteron chips tend to scale MUCH better to multiple processors than Intel's Xeons.

      FWIW a two-processor Opteron 246 (2.0GHz) system manages (base) SPEC CINT_rate scores of 28.8 and CFP_rate of 28.1. This makes the 2.0GHz PowerMacs 17.2 and 15.7 scores seem a touch low.

      Ohh, and those Opteron scores were in Windows.

  27. Re:g5 problems by EatAtJoes · · Score: 1

    Indeed ... last night I was able to do a massive Windows 2k Update while simultaneously upgrading my DSL router firmware, and could still read news and play games to pass the time ...

    My experience with mac has always been if you do more than one thing at a time you're asking for it. Not having used OS 10.x, I was hoping to hear that multitasking would have improved, as I'd love to ditch Windoze.

    Nothing, however, beats my work Debian woody dual 2GHz for speed performance and stability. I wanted to get an ibook but maybe I'll just get a Zaurus ...

  28. Games. by peterpi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games."

    Well, a fast CPU certainly doesn't do any harm, but a lot of games these days are bound by either processing geometry on the GPU or by memory bandwidth for texture lookups.

    Few games are multithreaded, so having two processors isn't such an advantage.

    Still, I wouldn't turn one down.

    1. Re:Games. by frankie · · Score: 2, Informative
      games these days are bound by either processing geometry on the GPU or by memory bandwidth

      Well, the (upper-end) G5 has about as much GPU and bandwidth as you can buy in the consumer market.

    2. Re:Games. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, that would make sense, except that you're wrong. I challenge you to find a GL game today that ISN'T multithreaded. It's a shame your comment was rated to 5, as you pulled it out of your ass.

    3. Re:Games. by peterpi · · Score: 1

      *drool* :)

    4. Re:Games. by mr_luc · · Score: 1

      That's true, but there are still things to be considered.

      Firstly, games like Quake 3 are processor-limited -- graphics cards are so fast nowadays that the processor is the limiter on the fps. But that's less important, because we're talking pretty much unnoticable improvements.

      More important are the areas of AI and physics.

      Running complex physical simulations (ragdoll effects, rigid body dynamics, cloth and hair simulation) absolutely punishes the CPU's of today's computers -- and those are all effects that really, really connect you to the game you're playing, really anchor you in the 'reality' of the game moment. The more complex those get, the more immersion you can have. Can you imagine if that field of grass in your friggin mmorpg wasn't just a bunch of sprites with random 'sway' characteristics, but were individual strands using 'hair' physics, and responding to generated wind dynamics?

      And probably most immediately, AI.

      This hasn't shown up -- yet. But games like Half-Life, and ESPECIALLY the new Deus Ex 2 and (hell yes!) Thief 3 games that will be coming out in a year or so. The ai in those games need to be scanning the area with their field of vision, doing visibility checks (on a PER AI basis), many times per second, in order to be realistic. Moreover, that cone of vision should be moving (ideally synched with his eyes -- dynamic animation = more processing requirements). And the visibility checks for smart AI in the future (possibly within a couple years) will include things like pattern recognition, where the AI's vision is actually crudely 'rendered' to memory many times per second, with pattern-recognition applied. ('Wait, did that chunk of shadow just move? I should be the only one here . . .').

      This is all coming, it's all conjecture -- but I'm just saying, faster processors are going to be a serious advantage in the days when GPU speeds start to slow their fantastic rate of growth, or the complexity and difficulty of creating games with more futuristic graphics limits the rate of graphical growth in the same way.

      And even if games aren't multithreaded -- it's floating-point performance that's the most important for these kinds of calculations, so if a processor is better at that, that is a good thing.

    5. Re:Games. by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      All true. And all things that have been said since about 1994. And yet the computer controlled behaviour in every commercially successful game is still the simplest possible state machine that makes a reasonable job of it.

      Why is this?

      Based on my experience in the games industry, it's because some socially inept maths savant sits for a year drawing lines and boxes on bits of paper and dribbling on about paradigm breaking feedback loops and fuzzy logic, then produces code that proceeds to bump into the nearest tree or rock and start humping it. While he draws more lines and boxes, one of the generic code monkeys (on about half his salary) lashes up a state machine that does the minimum that it needs to do to let them get on with testing. Curiously, the paradigm breaking AI never gets off the bits of paper and into actual in game behaviour.

      I'm sure it's not always done that way. Smart companies will skip the step of hiring the maths savant and just have a code monkey lash up the state machine on day one.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    6. Re:Games. by mikera · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in that AI and physics are definitely the big things in the next generation of games.

      Haveing said that, it's still quite tricky to write games to take advantage of multi-threaded operations. Your physics engine can't very easily go around moving bits of geometry around while another thread is rendering the scene or you could get into all kinds of trouble.

      Of course, you can get around all this with clever locking, timeslicing and making copies of game state etc. but this all adds overhead both in terms of clock cycles and development time.

      My guess is that it'll still be a while before any significant number of games really make the most out of multiple processors.

    7. Re:Games. by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      Firstly, games like Quake 3 are processor-limited -- graphics cards are so fast nowadays that the processor is the limiter on the fps. But that's less important, because we're talking pretty much unnoticable improvements.

      Quake 3 is not processor-limited. Take a look at various benchmarks showing different graphics cards on the same CPU, and different CPUs running the same graphics cards. The difference between CPUs once you get to about 2x the recommended CPU MHz for Quake 3 is very minimal. The difference between graphics cards is huge. This is why Apple's Q3 numbers for the G5 running an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro are very similar to everyone else's numbers for a P4 running the same card on Q3 (~330-340). There are CPU-limited games out there (UT comes to mind), but Q3 is not one of them.

      More important are the areas of AI and physics.

      Running complex physical simulations (ragdoll effects, rigid body dynamics, cloth and hair simulation) absolutely punishes the CPU's of today's computers -- and those are all effects that really, really connect you to the game you're playing, really anchor you in the 'reality' of the game moment. The more complex those get, the more immersion you can have. Can you imagine if that field of grass in your friggin mmorpg wasn't just a bunch of sprites with random 'sway' characteristics, but were individual strands using 'hair' physics, and responding to generated wind dynamics?


      This is why those fields are the ones being promised for the next iteration of many game franchises, including Doom 3 and Half-Life 2. CPU utilization in games is so low today compared to the specs of the machines you can buy it's almost insane. You used to have a very expensive computer to play the latest graphics-intensive games all the time, now you just have to worry about the graphics card. Even Half-Life 2 and Doom 3 are supposed to run on fairly low-spec machines compared to what's available today (and Doom 3 isn't even supposed to be available this year).

      And probably most immediately, AI.

      This hasn't shown up -- yet. But games like Half-Life, and ESPECIALLY the new Deus Ex 2 and (hell yes!) Thief 3 games that will be coming out in a year or so. The ai in those games need to be scanning the area with their field of vision, doing visibility checks (on a PER AI basis), many times per second, in order to be realistic. Moreover, that cone of vision should be moving (ideally synched with his eyes -- dynamic animation = more processing requirements). And the visibility checks for smart AI in the future (possibly within a couple years) will include things like pattern recognition, where the AI's vision is actually crudely 'rendered' to memory many times per second, with pattern-recognition applied. ('Wait, did that chunk of shadow just move? I should be the only one here . . .').


      Some level of vision-based response can already be faked pretty well without the massive overhead that you're looking at. What's more important at this point for many games (especially Thief 3 and DE2) is sound and communication. If I set off a grenade in a room, that sound's most likely going to travel a good distance, and the AI should run towards or away from that sound accordingly. Additionally, if one AI spots or hears me and there are 2 or 3 others nearby, he should alert them so that they either come at me with reasonable group AI or they cover him. Not to mention the things that some game developers/designers like to describe years before their game is released but never manage to actually do like 'you snipe someone from a rooftop and the shell drops to the street below, where someone hears it, comes over and sees the shell, then looks up and sees you, and starts firing (or running away)'.

      This is all coming, it's all conjecture -- but I'm just saying, faster processors are going to be a serious advantage in the days when GPU speeds start to slow their fantastic rate of growth, or the complexity and difficulty of creating games w

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    8. Re:Games. by yerricde · · Score: 1

      Few games are multithreaded, so having two processors isn't such an advantage.

      Don't many games run sound on a separate thread that sleeps on DirectSound? Don't many games run AI on a separate thread? Even if the graphics engine hogs CPU 0, that leaves CPU 1 for everything else, especially in future games.

      Mr. Carmack, are you reading this? Will Doom 3 take advantage of SMP?

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
    9. Re:Games. by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

      However I think games and graphic drivers have not been tuned for SMP primarily because hardly anyone has such systems. And moreso - Windows *for home* was Uniprocessor only util Win2k,XP, etc. came along.

      However I do believe, given the proliferation of SMP operating systems coupled with SMP systems, developers could find innovative ways to use the second CPU with minimum latency overhead.

      Kashif

    10. Re:Games. by mlk · · Score: 1

      Quake 3 had an SMP mode.

      It made it slower on my box (duel C466).

      Plus you can run, say quake-3-server-only on one proc, and client on the other ;)

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    11. Re:Games. by peterpi · · Score: 1

      Especially if the PS3 turns out to be the siamese-twin SMP coding nightmare rumours suggest it to be. ;)

  29. Re:Yeah, right... by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 2

    ... because this time they have a CPU that doesn't suck?

    Seriously, we all knew that the later G3s and all the G4s were behind the competition for all but a few very specialized operations. That's why Apple dumped Motorola, and is now working with IBM.

    The G5 doesn't suck. And for the first time, its FSB and memory bandwidth don't suck either. Apple's using standard SPEC benchmarks, and it looks from their writeup like they were fair. So give it a rest.

    --
    I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
  30. Re:Yeah, right... by dema · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the world of marketing. No matter what the company, the benchmarks are always going to be made to look the best to sell the product. If that means increasing certain numbers and/or decreasing others, or working in unfair enviornments, they will do it. There is no reason to spite Apple for doing what everyone else does. If you want honest benchmarks, you'd have to buy whatever systems you want to compare yourself and make your own conclusion.

  31. How long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    before some rigging of test discovered by someone, or dell comes up with his own benchmarks, stating that dell N times faster in this or that. Important thing what I can use this computer for.

    1. Re:How long by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      7.4 minutes... or maybe never, I'm not sure which

  32. not comparing apples to apples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why is Apple comparing the G5 to Xeons and P4s? Shouldn't they be pitting their super 64-bit processor against other 64-bit CPUs like Opteron and Madison?

    1. Re:not comparing apples to apples by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
      Shouldn't they be pitting their super 64-bit processor against other 64-bit CPUs like Opteron and Madison?

      If so, Apple would be wiping the floor with them in terms of price and availability.

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    2. Re:not comparing apples to apples by wedgewu · · Score: 1

      Maybe they're afraid of the result of comparing apples to apples... At the very least, they *should* compare Apples to Apples so that perhaps we can see how much of an improvement they've made over their previous work...

    3. Re:not comparing apples to apples by General+Sherman · · Score: 1

      Because that would be considered RAPE. Have you seen the performance of the Itanium 2?

      Also, they're not nearly as available for the consumer market or even in the same price range.

      --
      - Sherman
    4. Re:not comparing apples to apples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they have a 64bit OS, Apple don't

      MEOW!

  33. Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Test that computer or any of your generic dual-proc PC's against a Sun dual-proc Ultrasparc box and be prepared to cry. There's a reason that Sun's multiprocessor machines are expensive -- you get what you pay for.

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by dlosey · · Score: 1

      I think it would be more appropriate in this case to say:

      You get what your company pays for.

    2. Re:Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by Jord · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sun machines are expensive because of reliability and other things that are needed/wanted in the enterprise space. Sun machines are NOT sold for their speed. I am betting if you put this up against a dual processor Sun workstation that the G5 would blow it away in the speed category.

      Sun machines are great, all of my servers are running on Sun's but they are definitely not the fastest kid on the block but they sure are reliable.

    3. Re:Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by Genady · · Score: 1

      Ummmmm.... PowerPC 970 is a decendant of IBM's POWER4, which is WHIPPING SUN'S ASS! Suns have been loosing the speed race to IBM and HP for a while now. I wouldn't be surprised if the G5 system spanked any 'Solar' system.

      --


      What if it is just turtles all the way down?
    4. Re:Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      OK, here you go:
      Sun Blade 2000 (1.2GHz): 722 SPECint2000, 16.4 SPECint_rate2000.
      The SPECfp results for the UltraSPARC III are useless due to the art bug.

      Somebody should be crying, but it's not the Mac users.

    5. Re:Test it vs. a dual sparc machine by mlk · · Score: 1

      Nope.
      Suns are not very fast, they are stable, and capable of some pritty funky stuff, like hotswappable-ness (rip out a processor, without downtime, major funkyness).

      > you get what you pay for

      Dam right you do, I'd love to own one, we have a couple of Xerox printers running of Ultra 30s, which are no longer used (replaced all our printers with Windows solution which sucks, and no longer used as intenteded ;), I so want to nick one.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  34. So many games for Apple... by phunhippy · · Score: 3, Funny

    "the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games."

    Right.. because of these tests every pc game developer is now going to make a port to MAC OS of all the games they are developing.. :)

    1. Re:So many games for Apple... by zpok · · Score: 1

      They might... When the G4 was introduced, it did something. When OpenGL was put into OS X it did a lot more. The added geekness factor of the mac in the last few years has also done some good. Being able to rub Jobs shoulder on one of his keynotes is however the best incentive yet...

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    2. Re:So many games for Apple... by BancBoy · · Score: 1
      "the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games."

      Right.. because of these tests every pc game developer is now going to make a port to MAC OS of all the games they are developing.. :)

      No. Not exactly. But it'll will make the porting that much faster for houses like Aspyr and it will offer another high quality, high speed platform from which to produce games (for multiple platforms) or produce content for those games. Either way. It's a good thing. :)

      --
      [UID-HeinzIntel]
  35. why the focus on SPEC performance? by rodik · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can see that Apple wants to emphasize that this is one really fast PC, trying to prove it by using 'un-cheatable' numbers as opposed to marketing speech, but I really think they'd look even better if they'd do some comparisions that show what a bandwidth monster those G5s are, which I have been informed is the key to how those Xeons were crushed in the showdown at MW a while ago.

  36. topic Icon by twoslice · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The topic Icon depicts a G4 when the topic is clearly about the G5.

    --

    From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
  37. It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It's easy to compare a current PC with one that's not shipping yet (the dual G5) and get favorible results.


    Gee, I could compare the latest, fastest Dell with one that will ship 6 months from now and the one that will ship 6 months from now will win!

    1. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      Well, Tom's Hardware constantly reviews and provides benchmarks for hardware that isn't shipping yet.

      Do we give HIM crap for doing it? No, we reserve that right just for Apple.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    2. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Because, yeah, those computers don't even EXIST before the Shipping Fairy bamfs them into warehouses. The companies that designed them couldn't possibly have production samples or anything.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by LilMikey · · Score: 1

      Tom explicitly states the hardware is pre-release and objectively compares it on an even footing to what's available. In most reviews of pre-release hardware he pretty much tells the reader to take the results with a grain of salt because there are often vast differences between pre/testing hardware and what comes in the box.

      The shlop that Apple throws out is a PR ploy plain and simple. Kind of like the benchmarks MS tosses out comparing IIS to Apache. There's no objectivity and there's no telling what tweaks and tunes have been done to each system to in/decrease performance.

      Granted, it's true that Apple has probably come out with a decently fast processor but don't prove it by showing me benchmarks that'll probably end up on the back cover of their flyer.

      --
      LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
    4. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, G5s are shipping and education sales are expected to receive dual 2GHz G5s within the next two weeks, if not sooner. The 1.6GHz G5s have already been received by some people and, in fact, some people have even received 1.8GHz and 2.0 GHz machines, but have been keeping quiet about them for unknown reasons (Maybe NDAs, or fear of being harassed).

    5. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the point was that the benchmarks already released of the P4s Apple is using are lower than the benchmarks found elsewhere of those P4 processors.

      It's strange when Apple releases a SPEC benchmark of a P4 that's about 200 below average, and a Q3 benchmark of a P4 that's about 60fps below average.

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    6. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      The shlop that Apple throws out is a PR ploy plain and simple.

      Is this any different than the "shlop" thrown out by Intel or AMD or IBM?

      I agree we need "independent" benchmarks, but IMO pretty much all benchmarking is flawed, or more precisely the interpretation of the benchmarks is flawed. Who cares if processor A is 20% faster cranking through a stream of integer calculations if the integer unit pipeline is blown full of holes as soon as you throw a few other types of operations into the mix.

    7. Re:It's easy to compare a current machine (PC)... by LilMikey · · Score: 1

      I completely agree that shlop thrown out by Intel, AMD and IBM cannot be trusted and should be disregarded just as quickly as the shlop from Apple. The post was about Toms Hardware, an independent 3rd party with little bias one way or another. In fact, disproving those crap benchmarks is probably a major draw for readership.

      --
      LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
  38. Argon's not so noble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Enquirer is getting ready to run pictures of it cheating on J-Lo with a stripper.

  39. all about the OS by dcstimm · · Score: 0

    Remember, these scores are testing a dual xeon platform using windows, and the g5 using unix. If the dual xeons were running linux or bsd it would scale alot higher and use both cpus better. Here is my top output: Cpu0 : 52.8% user, 10.6% system, 0.0% nice, 36.5% idle, 0.0% IO-wait Cpu1 : 32.9% user, 4.0% system, 0.0% nice, 63.1% idle, 0.0% IO-wait Cpu2 : 48.0% user, 1.0% system, 0.0% nice, 51.0% idle, 0.0% IO-wait Cpu3 : 32.9% user, 1.3% system, 0.0% nice, 65.8% idle, 0.0% IO-wait And here is my /proc/cpuinfo processor : 0 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz stepping : 7 cpu MHz : 3001.309 cache size : 512 KB physical id : 0 siblings : 2 fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflus h dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe cid bogomips : 5931.00 processor : 1 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz stepping : 7 cpu MHz : 3001.309 cache size : 512 KB physical id : 0 siblings : 2 fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflus h dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe cid bogomips : 5996.54 processor : 2 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz stepping : 7 cpu MHz : 3001.309 cache size : 512 KB physical id : 3 siblings : 2 fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflus h dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe cid bogomips : 5996.54 processor : 3 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz stepping : 7 cpu MHz : 3001.309 cache size : 512 KB physical id : 3 siblings : 2 fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflus h dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe cid bogomips : 5980.16

    1. Re:all about the OS by jocknerd · · Score: 1

      The benchmarks Apple used in June had dual Xeons running Red Hat Linux.

  40. Re:WTF? Um, old?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tried to buy a G5 and my credit card was rejected for insufficient funds. I guess that equal to and slightly better performance under certain conditions is REALLY expensive.

  41. It does so matter ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    * I for one welcome our new benchmark overlards.
    * In societ russia, the bench marks you!
    * Imagine a beowulf cloister of benchmarks!
    * Oh wait ...

    1. Re:It does so matter ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The preceding posters attempts at humor is hereby
      ordered to cease and desist by order of the SCO legal department for infringement on SCO's patent in regards to repeating tired cliches on postings on the world wide web.

  42. Re:g5 problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice to see that someone keeps updating that trollerific template, though the Netscape reference should probably be changed at some point. Also, BBEdit Lite was discontinued in February, and hadn't been updated much prior to that. I highly doubt that anyone buying a Dual 2GHz G5 wouldn't be able to spring for an update to BBEdit Pro, or at least TextWrangler.

    To those who believed h(er|im): the 2 GHz G5 isn't even shipping yet

  43. Our tests show... by spells · · Score: 1
    that our competitors suck. :)
    The only SPEC results that matter are posted on the SPEC site and, like most benchmarks, even those are suspect.

  44. Speedholes. Duh. by itomato · · Score: 2, Funny

    An auger would be too big for the holes perforating the G5. The QS G4 speedholes are more auger-sized.

  45. SMP support would be great for simulation games by maynard · · Score: 1

    SMP support should be OK for handling the AIs in an FPS, but for a simulation game like Sim City it would be fantastic. Don't know how Sim City is written, but if it's already multithreaded it should scale already. And a game like that should be multithreaded given how many discrete (and sometimes asynchronous) events happen across the simulation. Also, it should benefit greatly from the move to 64 bit both in the greater VM address space and the increased number of threads/processes one can thus spawn. I'm definitely looking forward to the move to cheap 64 bit SMP for this alone. :) --M

  46. games, fragmentation.. by sniggly · · Score: 2, Interesting
    But when will we see a 64 bit SMP version of quake3? Or any other game? Will game dev studios be required to develop multiple versions of Mac games now?

    Mainstreat Intel based OS will see the same problems I guess, 32 and 64 bit versions, linux, windows versions...

    But I bet you if id software releases doom3 for a dual g2 64 bits mac... it'll be fabulous performance compared to intel architectures.

    --
    Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    1. Re:games, fragmentation.. by evilviper · · Score: 1

      We've covered this... You don't need a 64-bit version to take advantage of the greatly increased performance of the 64-bit PPC processor.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:games, fragmentation.. by sniggly · · Score: 1

      There are gamers who go to the edge to squeeze another megaherz out of their processors, another fps out of their q3 game... In photoshop it'll matter if you have several large images open (64 bit addressing) in Gaming it'll matter because people will want to have the 64 bits port of the game. I'm sure you've "covered it" with whomever "we" are but apparently that "we" isnt all inclusive :P

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    3. Re:games, fragmentation.. by evilviper · · Score: 1
      I'm sure you've "covered it" with whomever "we" are but apparently that "we" isnt all inclusive :P

      It was thoroughly covered when the story about the 64-bit PPC processor was first on /.

      Go back and check it out, isntead of starting the same old tried arguements again.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  47. Yeah that will be a big help.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Running all of those compute intensive apps that are available for the mac....

  48. MacOS by rodimus79 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Having been forced to use Macs throughout my college career, I've used them quite a bit. While the lack of software sucks, my biggest problem has always been Macs inherent inability to multitask. Most Macs simply can't handle the way I work. I can crash most if them in a matter of seconds, given they have any memory intensive programs. The latest models I used were dual processor G4's with several gigs of memory. How I crashed these, I don't know, but I assure you it didn't take very long. On the other hand, I've had my PC crash once in 6 months of use. I contend that MacOS isn't nearly as stable as some might contend.

    1. Re:MacOS by Squidgee · · Score: 1
      Oi, I'll bite.

      Mac OS X can multi-task (The old OSes could, but I'm with you; they suck); in fact, it does so unbelievably well. I've had, in my year of Mac OS X, 1 crash. ONE.

      So, maybe the Old Mac OSes sucked, but Mac OS X is better than you can imagine. It's even more stable than Linux, for me.

    2. Re:MacOS by rodimus79 · · Score: 1

      I like the new OS, especially in the look and feel.. But for some reason, I could make some pretty powerful machines look like 486's. I also found out that Safari is not keen on some shockwave- checkout Nikelab.com on it.. Some of the little functions on there will crash it pretty quick

    3. Re:MacOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I contend your a troll and have never used a mac

    4. Re:MacOS by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

      You obviously weren't using OS X. It's true, 9 had some bad memory/multitasking issues that made a poorly configured machine crash often, but X is Unix. I've NEVER had a system crash (only a couple kernel panics from weird peripherals). You can run all the big apps at the same time and it may slow down a bit, but everything will continue as expected.

    5. Re:MacOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to get rid of that 66mhz g4 prototype from the 80's.

    6. Re:MacOS by Squidgee · · Score: 1
      Heh, it -does- slow some machines down...

      Honestly, however, I don't get effected by it much, and I play games, program, surf the web, etc...all on a 600mhz iBook.

      And I don't run Safari, so that doesn't effect me. =p Omniweb all the way!

    7. Re:MacOS by rodimus79 · · Score: 0

      I was using a dual processor G4 running the latest version of MacOSX, nice looking machine with dual monitors. I crashed it running the following simeultaneously: Photoshop, Fireworks, Safari w/ an applet running, Flash, Dreamweaver, and After Effects.. And Blammo, instant reboot..

    8. Re:MacOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, well, it's your blatant whoring of Macromedia that is the root of the problem. ;)

    9. Re:MacOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't they both use the same rendering engine?

    10. Re:MacOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you used OS 9, multitasking would suck, but since OS X it's all preemptive multitasking. The same stuff that windows uses.

      But it's obvious you're a troll anyways because:

      a) Lack of details
      b) G4s could handle at most 2 gigs of memory, not several.

  49. It's the floating point performance for games by davidmb · · Score: 2, Informative
    It's the floating point results that point to decent gaming performance in these benchmarks, and it really does seem impressive. Of course the Slashdot summary distorts the picture slightly, but that's to be expected.

    I agree that dual CPUs provide little benefit to games, perhaps if Apple standardised on two processors developers might take advantage of them?

    1. Re:It's the floating point performance for games by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I agree that dual CPUs provide little benefit to games, perhaps if Apple standardised on two processors developers might take advantage of them?

      It's not that developers don't want to take advantage of them, it's that it takes a very large amount of work to get a very moderate boost (or any boost at all, initial work on using dual CPUs for Quake 2/3 slowed the game down) from most games. Oh, and then there's the fact that most games get most of their measured performance from the video card's capabilities, rather than the CPU.

      The Q3 benchmarks Apple posted for the 3GHz P4 don't match up with benchmarks posted elsewhere. In fact, the first Q3 benchmark I found of a P4 using a Radeon 9800 Pro was at 333 fps, 4 less than the G5 benchmark (as opposed to the 275 posted by Apple for the P4).

      Now, some types of games may benefit more from enhancements to use dual-CPUs, but most graphics-intensive games are waiting on the frame rendering, and in order to get any real benefit from a dual-CPU setup when you're waiting on the video card is to do as much as possible to limit the cost of moving threads and data between CPUs.

      The real benefit is when you're running multiple applications, so you can dedicate one processor to the game and one processor to the rest of your applications, and hopefully minimize the performance hit from multi-tasking.

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    2. Re:It's the floating point performance for games by necrognome · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The Q3 benchmarks Apple posted for the 3GHz P4 don't match up with benchmarks posted elsewhere. In fact, the first Q3 benchmark I found of a P4 using a Radeon 9800 Pro was at 333 fps, 4 less than the G5 benchmark (as opposed to the 275 posted by Apple for the P4).
      The P4's Q3 benches should be much higher than these. Typical results for the P4 show scores higher than 400 fps for the fastest processors, and the linked scores are from a testbed containing an older GPU (i.e. 9700 Pro). Apple's "benchmarks" on their site note that the P4 was a Dell machine. I'm willing to bet that the latest mobo, chipset, and graphics drivers weren't installed.
      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    3. Re:It's the floating point performance for games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because of the nature of games. Everything must be synchronized to the frame and drawn on screen through a single channel. You can't split off AI. You can't split off the UI. You can't split off sound effects. You CAN split off music (a dynamic soundtrack for example, which can be a few milliseconds behind the action), you can split off map loading for seamless transitions and HUGE levels. Everything else is tied to the current frame, and the synchronization overhead is too huge when you're dealing with 100 FPS and all that goes into making one frame.

      Still, there are benefits to gaming on a dual system; your computer can be used for other tasks in the background while you're playing. If you happen to be rendering something, or encoding a movie or whatever, you don't have to wait for it to finish before you fire up Quake and get decent performance. You'll get a lot of mileage out of a dual system, and it will stay useful much much longer.

    4. Re:It's the floating point performance for games by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 2, Informative

      The floating point performance of the G5 is nothing to write home about. They only managed a score of 840 in SpecFP 2000, which is WAY bellow the performance of current x86 chips (as benchmarked by anyone OTHER than Apple/Apple paid testers).

      Here are some official SpecFP (baes) scores:

      The P4 3.2GHz : 1252
      AMD Opteron 246 (2.0GHz) : 1209
      IBM Power4+ 1.7GHz : 1598
      HP/Intel Itanium2 1.5GHz : 2119

      As you can see, Apple's score of 840 in this benchmark isn't exactly impressive. Even one of the new 2.4C GHz P4 chips (800MHz bus speed) will score higher.

      Now, I know that these scores are using a compiler that is more heavily optimized than that used for the Mac, but guess what, there ARE compilers that are more heavily optimized out there for x86 than those for the Mac. MUCH more heavily optimized. Does this make the comparison somehow unfair? Not at all, because the end result is the same, applications run a lot faster on the newest x86 chips than on Macs.

      Of course, system performance has never really been the reason why people buy Macs vs. a PC.

  50. who cares? by jtilak · · Score: 1

    do a few points on some benchmark really matter? we all know apple has "caught up" to wintel now. the real question is CAN THEY KEEP UP? or will they fall behind again in a year or two? There is a 3 ghz G5 due out suposedly next summer, but how much will it cost and what will be the availablity?

    also, even the low-end G5 is pretty expensive right now. if you want a bargain, you have to go with a G4. you can buy a faster athlon-based pc for that money. am i wrong?

    1. Re:who cares? by oscarmv · · Score: 1

      Well, in a first for him, Steve Jobs actually promised 3GHz G5 computers a year from now. Which means he's quite confident about it. And that being a 50% increase in MHz (and you know it scales better from 2GHz to 3GHz as the G5 will than the P4 from 3GHz to 4.5GHz) it should keep up nicely.

    2. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um, someone needs to mod this guy. he's an obvious idiot/troll.

  51. Get em boys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here they come! /me watches as the wintel damage controllers spew their FUD and confuse the moderators.

  52. yup. Time for a 970 (or 2) by itomato · · Score: 1

    I knew someone else would be annoyed by that.

    The generic Apple would have been better, but since it's a "hardware" thing, CPU, specifically, we got the G Fo'.

    Time to submit a snazzy G5 icon!

  53. Independant 1.6 Ghz Benchmark Results by miradu2000 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Chasomint has here a table comparing the 1.6 Ghz G5 (slowest available) to 6 other windows machines. It is a complicated photoshop benchmark. The 1.6 Ghz G5 gets beat by the single P4 3.06, however it is the 2nd fastest machine there by benchmark wins. Note that the 1.6 Ghz machine is the lowend G5, and has nowhere near the performance of the dual 2.0 ghz G5's that apple uses to test.

    1. Re:Independant 1.6 Ghz Benchmark Results by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      you're an idiot. it is quite obvious the 1.6 g5 is the slowest machine in this test. Who cares if it has the 2nd most benchmark wins? that's only because the fastest p4 beats the other machines on tests that it would've beaten the g5. Try adding up all the times to get a better picture.

    2. Re:Independant 1.6 Ghz Benchmark Results by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      > it is quite obvious the 1.6 g5 is the slowest machine in
      >this test.

      Only if you average all of the scores (geometric mean, of course).

      >Who cares if it has the 2nd most benchmark wins?

      I would venture to guess those people who use predominantly those benchmarks?

      If you don't use rotate 90, lens flare, pointelize, etc. but make heavy use of Gaussian Blur 1 (and it isn't shabby in the rest of them), Despeckle, RGB-CYMK, Reduce Size, or Polar Coordinates, then it really shines.

      > Try adding up all the times to get a better picture.

      This is quite possibly the worst way of getting a picture of how a system performs that you could do. It weights *very* heavily on those tasks which take longer for whatever reason. Indexed geometric means are much more reliable ways of comparing performance if you are going to do it over several tests.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  54. Re:Yeah, right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The G5 may in fact be good, but Apple is still certainly lying on their benchmarks. There is no such thing as a 'standard SPEC' benchmark', as Apple is free to choose whatever compilers they want with whatever compilation settings they way. With the last round of Apple benchmarks a couple months ago it was shown that they seriously crippled the compiler on the PC side, thus tilting the benchmarks in their favor. I have every reason to believe they did the same thing with these benchmarks.

  55. Fastest PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The g5 is the fastest PC.
    The problem is not the mac, it's the compiler!

  56. Re:First post from my G5! by dlosey · · Score: 1

    This is all the more humorous, since you are a subscriber, and have first dibs on the articles.

  57. Re:Yeah, right... by Krach42 · · Score: 1

    Well.... I don't think they ENTIRELY dumped Motorola, after all, Motorola still has a part in the whole PowerPC group that initially designed the PowerPC.

    But, I'm glad to see them ditched on the top line processor anyways.

    --

    I am unamerican, and proud of it!
  58. Way too low numbers for P4... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple used GCC in their P4 benchmarks. It's a well known fact that GCC doesn't produce very fast code.

    Here are some real results:

    Spec Int base, 1 CPU:
    2GHz Opteron: 1248
    3.06GHz Xeon with 1MB of L3: 1242
    3.2GHz Pentium 4: 1221

    Apple score:
    2GHz G5: 800

    Spec FP base, 1 CPU:
    2GHz Opteron: 1209
    3.06GHz Xeon with 1MB of L3: 1173
    3.2GHz Pentium 4: 1271

    Apple score:
    2GHz G5: 840

    Spec Int rate, 2 CPUs:
    2GHz Opteron: 28.8
    3.06Ghz Xeon with 1MB of L3: 25.8

    Apple score:
    2GHz G5: 17.2

    Spec FP rate, 2 CPUs:
    2GHz Opteron: 28.1
    3.06Ghz Xeon with 1MB of L3: 19.6

    Apple score:
    2GHz G5: 15.7

    In single CPU benchmarks new G5 reaches 2/3 of Opterons/P4s performance. In dual CPU benchmarks Opteron is twice as fast as G5!

    1. Re:Way too low numbers for P4... by nullard · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple used GCC in their P4 benchmarks.

      You know what? You're right. Of course, Apple also used GCC in their G5 benchmarks, so I'm not certain what your point was. This has been debated extensively. Look at the last /. story about Apple's benchmarks to read all about it.

      --


      t'nera semordnilap
  59. Please look at the Dell results at the SPEC site by mzs · · Score: 5, Informative
    This looks to be more of VeriTest again. If you look at the Third Quarter 2003 SPEC CPU2000 Results you will see that the Dells have CINT2000 scores in at least the 1100's. Apple gives the results for the Xeon and P4 as 836 and 889. While the Reg gives scores of 836 to the Pentium and 839 to the Xeon. The Reg article does not cite the source for the numbers in the article. I could not find anything I thought was new at Apple about this. Is this from the same statement produced by Apple with the VeriTest results from a while back? Maybe this was the first benchmark with the dual 2Ghz G5's?

    In any case there was much consternation in the past about the VeriTest benchmarks becuase they did not use the same compilers that Dell used. Also VeriTest used things like an optimized malloc library on the G5's and faster memory with semi-secret memory timing tweaks in OF. If you want to take these benchmarks with a grain of salt, you should compare the DELL numbers from the SPEC site to those of the G5 from Veritest.

  60. Time to update? by Professor_Quail · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's time to update the 'G4' logo to a PPC970 picture, like this one (bandwidth warning).

  61. Games on Apple??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.'"

    Now all they have to do is get the game publishers to release titles than play on the Mac as well as Windows. Seriously, what a ridiculous statement.

    Flame on!

  62. Not enought to push me to buy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it only edged out then why should I bother to push out the cash.

  63. Why not test the things people care about? by silverhalide · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The only benchmarks that should matter are: does it run Photoshop/Premiere/Final Cut Pro faster? I could care less that my computer is a 11.5 compared to 10.32 on another machine. That means nothing to the end user.

    1. Re:Why not test the things people care about? by pressman · · Score: 1

      well, Adobe has officially dropped Premiere for the Mac, so we should probably discount that app. AfterEffects would be a better benchmark.

      p.s. Thank gawd Premiere is dead on the Mac! What a hideous editor!

      --
      Pooty tweet
  64. Re:g5 problems by w3weasel · · Score: 3, Informative
    Not having used OS 10.x, I was hoping to hear that multitasking would have improved
    When you look up... do you see a large granite object?
    I will assume that this is the case, so let me be the first to inform you that BSD errr... I mean OSX has in fact, 'improved' multitasking over your experience with OS 9 or earlier.
    Drawing any conclusions about the Mac platform based on experiences with OS 9 or earlier is much like concluding that Automobiles are not useful based on your experience with a motorized skateboard.
    Rambling statements aside, on my 5 year old G3 (400mhz) I happily run updates, VirtualPC with WinXP, edit my Photoshop files, use Terminal with all its Unix-y goodness, browse the net, listen to music, and play a game of DiabloII... yes, at the same time.
    Now your windows machine can do all that too, but you'd need two OS's to do it
    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  65. rvsb quote by QEDog · · Score: 3, Funny

    Or as the guys from redvsblue put it here:

    The confusing thing about PCs is just that you go to the store, and there is just so many games... everywhere you look! While on the Mac, its just six. And you know which ones are good, 'cause you have already played them on the PC like five or six years ago.

    --
    "There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
    1. Re:rvsb quote by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      Remember, though they also said (in the FAQ :

      Q: Why do you hate Macs?
      A: We don't hate Macs, the game companies do. Get it?

      Q: No.
      A: You would fit in on our forums. No one there gets anything either.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  66. Re:mac gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Warcraft III, Worlds of Warcraft, Shadow Bane, Doom 3 etc.... oh wait, you're trolling...

  67. Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by LemonYellow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think we've been through this before.

    If you want to test relative compiler technology, you use the fastest compiler for each platform. If you want to test the platform itself, you use software which is as close to identical between platforms as possible. Hence, gcc.

    Pretty basic experimental technique is at work here.

    1. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by rthille · · Score: 1

      Well, sort of. I assume that most developers for Windows aren't going to use GCC, so unless you are developing your own software then you should test using the compiler most likely to be used by the developers of the software you want to run. Or, if the software you want to run is already available on both platforms, you should do a head to head test of that software. Knowing that the Mac is faster/slower than the PC when using the same compiler on both platforms won't tell you anything because the code a single compiler (GCC) isn't necessarily optimal (or equally suboptimal) on both platforms.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    2. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Cyno · · Score: 1

      That's assuming you use the same code in the P4 and G5 ports of gcc.

      I think a better comparison would be Itanium/Itanium2, Opteron and the G5. Or at least Athlon64.

    3. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by janolder · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What you're proposing as basic scientific technique is bad science. Gcc's backend is quite different for G5 and x86. Testing this way invalidates the results. It's almost like testing both a diesel truck and a Ferrari with diesel fuel on the pretense of fairness. The truck wins hands down, but have you really learned anything?

      If you want to compare compilers, you run different compilers on the same hardware. If you want to know how fast the hardware is, you let the manufacturer hand-tweak the test as much as possible, which includes picking the compiler and its options.

      If you want to know how fast the hardware is in the eyes of the user, you use standard configurations which the software vendors will use: GCC for G5 and MSVC or Intel for x86. Using an inferior compiler on x86 (the x86 backend of gcc isn't that great, in fact it is quite bad) doesn't mean squat to the user. Word/Excel/Photoshop isn't going to get compiled on gcc for x86 anytime soon.

    4. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to know how fast the hardware is in the eyes of the user, you use standard configurations which the software vendors will use: GCC for G5 and MSVC or Intel for x86.

      The benchmarked configurations were Mac OS X on the G5, with GCC, and Linux on the PC gear, also with GCC.

      Nobody uses Intel's Linux compiler. Everybody uses GCC when they write Linux software. And, of course, there's no Visual C++ for Linux, so suggesting that is just dumb.

      Word/Excel/Photoshop isn't going to get compiled on gcc for x86 anytime soon.

      Word/Excel/Photoshop users don't care about benchmarks anyway. The only people who actually care about benchmarks are scientific and technical users. Everybody else cares about things like application availability, TCO, and ease of use.

    5. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume that most developers for Windows aren't going to use GCC, so unless you are developing your own software then you should test using the compiler most likely to be used by the developers of the software you want to run.

      The comparison was between a G5 with Mac OS X and a set of PC's with Linux. Windows didn't come into it. If it had, then you'd be right: Visual C++ would have been the only correct choice.

      Knowing that the Mac is faster/slower than the PC when using the same compiler on both platforms won't tell you anything

      Of course it does. It tells you that the vast majority of software will be faster on the Mac. Because the vast majority of Linux and Mac OS X software is compiled with the self-same compiler used for the test.

      These benchmarks demonstrate exactly what they are intended to demonstrate. Saying that don't demonstrate some-other-thing kind of misses the point.

    6. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by lederhosen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No. If you want to test relative compiler technology, you benchmark compilers on the same
      platform.

      If you want to test the platform itself, you use software which is the fastest possible.

      If you want to test if a program is portable you
      use gcc (as it uses the same frontend on all platforms).

      If you are Apple you use a mix of gcc and some
      strange fortran compiler with different versions
      and flags to show that the G5 can be faster than
      the p4 even though it clearly is slower in SPEC.

      If Apple was to follow the rules, then why do
      they not post their results on SPEC???

    7. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by janolder · · Score: 1
      The benchmarked configurations were Mac OS X on the G5, with GCC, and Linux on the PC gear, also with GCC.

      But picking Linux as the test platform to run on is fair? I'd like to point out that 95% of all desktops run Windows. Also, what makes you think the scientific and technical users you refer to later on don't use Intel's C++/Fortran compilers for Linux when it matters? In my experience the speedup is quite dramatic, on the order of 30-40% faster - which is borne out also by Dell's posted SPEC benches: ~1200 for both int and float and 25(!) for rate (G5: 17). Ouch.

      The only people who actually care about benchmarks are scientific and technical users. Everybody else cares about things like application availability, TCO, and ease of use.

      Right. So why is Apple playing the performance flute so hard with the most unscientific comparisons I have ever seen right after air ionizers and snake oil?

    8. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      The platform is far more than the hardware, it is the OS, the libraries, and the compilers. AMD is comparing Opteron to Xeon, and running ICC to generate their binaries. Why? Because there's no better compiler for Opteron. Is it a disadvantage? Yes, but that's life. With all things equal, perhaps the G5 is faster. But all things are not equal. 95% of Windows programs are not compiled with GCC. The performance-dependant ones use ICC. You can't just compare the hardware because software also plays an important part in system performance.

      Oh, and Apple is the only major computer company that benchmarks compeditors systems and releases the results. AMD, HP, Dell, Intel, and other companies submit their results to SPEC and draw their graphs from submitted SPEC scores. Why didn't Apple do this? Because their results aren't very impressive. That could be because there are no G5 optimized compilers. In the future there may be, but there will also be better x86 compilers.

      We're not running a science experiment here. This is reality. And a test that cripples the P4 to make things "equal" ignores the simple fact that the real-world isn't equal.

    9. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by DavidBrown · · Score: 1

      If you want to test relative compiler technology, you use the fastest compiler for each platform. If you want to test the platform itself, you use software which is as close to identical between platforms as possible. Hence, gcc.

      True, true, but who cares about relative compiler technology? The only benchmarck worth anything to the end user is real-life application performance.

      --
      144l. ph34r my 133t l3g4l 5k1lz!
    10. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But picking Linux as the test platform to run on is fair?

      Sure it's fair. It's been demonstrated that programs run slightly faster under Linux than Windows on the same hardware. So if they did the test versus Windows, the difference would be even greater, and the Linux crowd would commence to whine about how Apple's benchmarks are invalid because they didn't test against Linux.

      Also, what makes you think the scientific and technical users you refer to later on don't use Intel's C++/Fortran compilers for Linux when it matters?

      C++? No. FORTRAN? Also no. (Does Intel even HAVE a FORTRAN compiler? I honestly don't know.)

      There are generally accepted de facto standards for these things, and for C, GCC is it. For FORTRAN, it's Absoft.

      which is borne out also by Dell's posted SPEC benches

      Now, wait just a dang minute. You're upbraiding Apple for hiring a third party to do verifiable tests and producing results you don't like, but the to prove that Apple's tests are bogus you point to Dell, who published COMPLETELY meaningless and unscientific numbers? Good one, sparky. I guess we see now where your true agenda lies. (Emphasis on lies.)

      So why is Apple playing the performance flute so hard with the most unscientific comparisons I have ever seen right after air ionizers and snake oil?

      Said the guy who quoted Dell. Pfffff.

    11. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Gcc's backend is quite different for G5 and x86"

      Agree to this... GCC for x86 exists far longer than the one for Mac OS X and, therefore, is more optimized. So, according to your analogy, it is like using gasoline to test a diesel truck and a Ferrari and the diesel truck wins hands down. ;)

      "Photoshop isn't going to get compiled on gcc for x86 anytime"

      Yet another good observation and the Photoshop test indicates that Photoshop updated with a G5 plug-in compiled with a non-GCC for Mac OS X beats Photoshop compiled with a non-GCC for x86.

      Wait a sec, your point being...?

    12. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you believe Dell's or Intel's SPEC benches? Everyone knows that Intel heavily optimizes their compiler for SPEC. At least Apple pointed out how they obtain the SPEC numbers using open source compiler and could be replicated by anyone interested. Can you see how Intel's compiler generates the codes?

      Also, saying that compiler should be heavily emphasized when comparing hardwares is plain stupid.
      If I give you and your friend a mathematical problem to find the roots of: x^3 + 6x^2 + 11x + 6 = 0, but before I do, I "compile" the problem to (x+1)(x+2)(x+3)=0 for your friend, which one of you finish first? Does that mean your friend is loads smarter than you? Is this a fair test of your IQ?

      Face it, all this SPEC benchmarks are just bullshit, be it from Apple or Intel or AMD or Dell. It is a simplistic test to compare complex systems. You just don't like it because Apple is beating Intel or at least pulling even on a tilted field at their own game.

    13. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by yujen · · Score: 1

      People DO use intel compilers. Intel has one of the best compiler teams in the industry incase you haven't noticed... they now own the entire ex-DEC Fortran/C/C++ compiler teams!

    14. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You don't know a thing about Spec. All the details required to reproduce the results are in the Spec report, if they aren't published along with the numbers, the numbers are not endorsed by the Spec organization. The entire system, including compiler and OS as well as hardware must be made commercially available within 6 (or maybe only 3) months from the date of publication.

      As for optimizing for the Spec benchmarks, that is part of the plan. Spec is composed of portions of real-world applications that the Spec commitee thinks are representative of the kind of mainstream applications that are both common to many real users and where modern architecture may be somewhat lacking - the Spec guys want to encourage manufacturers to focus on those areas to help improve the market overall. Of course there all kinds of politics that go on in Spec that undermine this focus, but those are clearly stated goals of Spec.

      Furthermore, how about we leave the compiler completely out? You hand-translate the C and FORTRAN code in the Spec suite to G5 assembly and I will do the same for x86-64 assembly. You do your best to write the fastest implementation for the G5 and I will do the same for x86-64 that way we can measure the true performance of each platform. Now how is that any different from letting the best compiler for each platform produce the best asm that it can for each platform?

      The answer is: It ain't any different, just faster than doing it by hand.

    15. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by mlk · · Score: 1

      > If you want to test the platform itself...

      You should use the compiler the apps you are running are going to be compiled with, i.e. GCC/CW? for Mac and MS VC++/Intel for Wintel.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    16. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. When you run software- you want software that does the job, and in the manner that is most efficient (which may be in terms of speed or memory useage - depending on the user's preference). If it does this - you don't care what the name of the program or its maker is. Comparing different compilers (assuming they produce valid executeables) on different computers is a valid way of comparing platforms - users don't care that in theory a better compiler could be constructed for the other platform-they only care about the tools that are available. Besides, the fact that better tools exist for one platform, may indicate the platform is better.
      Incidentally, I am not necessarily saying P4s are faster than G5s-there seems to be some concern over whether the Intel compiler always make valid optimizations.

    17. Re:Lies, damn lies and benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're a fucken retard :\

  68. Re:Agur! by johny_qst · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ummm... not that the availability of games for macs hasn't been traditionally terrible. And they have been getting better with the move to OSX, but I still have a problem with this augur conclusion.
    How is running a dual proc machine going to help software that isn't traditionally multi-threaded? The OS might have a fun time swapping which proc gets the game for the next 10 million cycles, but auguring well for performance.... what a farce.

    --
    Fnord.sig
  69. Trolls by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    But you responded, thus prolonging the troll! Who is worse, the troll, or the reader who feeds him?

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:Trolls by Jord · · Score: 1
      That question is right in line with the tree falling in the forest with no one around...

      Now watch me get nailed for being off topic...

  70. Chewbaca defense? by Scudsucker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ar more interested in the progress and development of AMD's Opteron line than all this G5 stuff? I mean, dont misunderstand. I'm excited about desktop 64 bit computing, but I really dont want to be locked into a whole platform.

    You don't want to be "locked in" to the G5, so you'd rather be locked in to the Opteron? The only company that makes AMD Opterons is AMD. This does not make sense...

    1. Re:Chewbaca defense? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Most of my software recompiles on a plethora of other CPU architectures. So this notion that those of us that would prefer the Opteron are "locked" into anything is absurd and highly misleading.

      Our position only seems senseless to you because you've got Apple blinders on.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Chewbaca defense? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Most of my software recompiles on a plethora of other CPU architectures.

      Same is true for a G5.

      So this notion that those of us that would prefer the Opteron are "locked" into anything is absurd and highly misleading.

      Uh, right. The only people who are making x86-84 chips are AMD. If you start to depend on Opterons but AMD can't afford the R&D to keep pace with Intel, goes bankrupt or has supply problems, you're fucked. How again is this not proprietary?

      Our position only seems senseless to you because you've got Apple blinders on.

      More like you've got your idiot-pc-fanboy hat on.

  71. And next... by Kegetys · · Score: 1

    Next intel will issue a benchmark that tells the exact opposite, and then a third party benchmark will tell that there really isn't that much difference between them after all.

  72. Re:Agur! by r00zky · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Agur is the basque word for bye...

    I think you meant to write "Say agur to Apple if you want to play games" ;)

    --
    I'm a chainsmokin' alcoholic sociopath, so-ci-o-path
  73. Re:mac gaming by DirkDaring · · Score: 1

    How about Planetside? Neverwinter Nights Shadows of Undrentide? Enter the Matrix? Monopoly Tycoon? Star Wars Galaxies: An Empire Divided? Madden 2004? Rise of Nations etc... oh wait, you're trolling...

  74. Are they really that expensive by LemonYellow · · Score: 1

    The UK Apple Store is selling 1.6GHz G5s for 1549 pounds, which doesn't seem too bad compared to the competition. I've specced up a Dell Precision 650 with about the same equipment and it comes out to 1649 pounds. Obviously, a disposable white-box PC is going to be cheaper.

    The G4s are cheaper though, at least at the low end.

  75. Re:Yeah, right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O NO! THEY ARE TRYING TO SELL THEIR PRODUCT! HOW AWFUL!!

    Of course they want the benchmarks to be in their favor you moron. Jesus.

  76. who cares? by Scudsucker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is Apple going to run around saying how incredibly slow the systems are that they were selling a month ago? What sense does that make for them? If you have a burning desire to see how the G4 does against the G5, wait until Macworld runs some Photoshop tests. And why are you complaning that they are making legit (or at least more legit than the old Photoshop bakeoffs) advertisements that the G5 is faster than Intel's processors?

  77. ADC Student Developers get a 20% hardware discount by PghFox · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Apple Developer Connection Student Program is a low-cost membership program (USD $99 / year), providing tools and special discounts for students 18 or over interested in developing for the Mac platform. Members receieve a once-per-lifetime 20% discount on hardware. Hardware can be purchased through the ADC version of the Apple Store (click the 'ADC Hardware Purchase Program Store' link). Without the discount a Dual 2 GHz G5 would be USD $2999, and with the discount a Dual 2 GHz G5 would be USD $2499. Details of the program are covered in the FAQ.

    --
    --- Fox
  78. Better start shutting down by ZackSchil · · Score: 1

    I read it on Slashdot that no one makes games for Macs, so it must be true. I better let Aspyr, MacPlay, MacSoft, Westlake Interactive, Ambrosia, Freeverse, The Omni Group, Blizzard, GraphSim, and Feral Interactive among many other commercial operations and hundreds of shareware developers that no one at all makes games for the Macintosh and that they should all shut down immediately. Additionally, Inside Mac Games should shut down their operation immediately as they are a waste of server space because they will never have any news to report ever.

    I heard it on Slashdot so it must be true.

    1. Re:Better start shutting down by veddermatic · · Score: 1

      You forgot iD Software. But then agian, those guys just write crappy games that don't sell.

      --
      Department of Homeland Security: Removing the rights real patriots fought and died for since 2001
    2. Re:Better start shutting down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow! is that over 10 studios?.. that's definitely comparable to the INNUMERABLE AMOUNT OF GAME STUDIOS ON PC YOU MAC FAGGOT.. it seems like having no ability to reason is a prerequisite to mac use.. as well as the homosexuality

    3. Re:Better start shutting down by scottgfx · · Score: 1

      When you responded to that e-mail you received on that pill that can make your penis larger, I was able to get your credit card number and order that G5 I was wanting. Thanks! Oh, and let me know how it goes with the medication.

      --
      It's mandatory to wash your hands before returning to the land of Dairy Queen.
    4. Re:Better start shutting down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      was that funny to you?.. if it was, I have a whole bottle of pills you can take and a bottle of boones to wash them down with

  79. Re:Agur! by Ro'que · · Score: 1

    Come on, they've got that one sweet game...what's it called...oh yeah, Photoshop. Adobe makes it. You can't go wrong with a game that has seven sequels, all of which are best sellers!

  80. The New Mac G5.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..the fastest hunk-a-junk in the galaxy

  81. Re:Please look at the Dell results at the SPEC sit by derubergeek · · Score: 2, Insightful
    You'll also notice that Dell uses special tweaks and memory management libraries to get their results.

    However, the nature of SPEC is that you perform your own tests and submit them. You certainly should not be performing any other manufacturers tests for them...

    --
    Trust me. This is an inactive account. Regardless of what the /. bean counters might report.
  82. Re:Hell yeah! by Surak · · Score: 1

    Don't forget SameGame and Tetris! Oooh!

  83. cross-platform development and porting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps developers of scientific software would be more interested in the Mac as a compute platform if there were any easy ways to port existing *nix applications (just the compute engines and the inter-process communications tools, never mind the GUIs). It would also help if Apple would make it play nice in a heterogeneous environment (say, actually paying attention to NIS and NFS properly).

  84. Re:yup. Time for a 970 (or 2) by twoslice · · Score: 1

    'Cause the G5 is dual CPU someone enterprising slashdotter would probable create an Icon that would no doubt would look like a pair of hooters...

    --

    From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
  85. Re:g5 problems by EatAtJoes · · Score: 1

    Did you read the parent post I was responding to? Clearly not ... and btw the windoze box could easily handle VMWare + updates + photoshop + 20 terminals + cygwin + XFree86 + any ancient game like DiabloII + SoundForge + Vegas with 20 tracks of audio. With ONE processor.

    Since you obviously missed the point at the end, Linux still kicks ass over all of the above. Stick that in your SuperDrive and smoke it.

  86. Extremely old story ... by Ninja+Programmer · · Score: 1, Informative

    What that hell is this?!?!

    These exactly disclosures were available on the day of the G5 launch. The link with the raw data is here:

    Veritest PDF

    And you can find a thorough debunking of the whole thing on my site here

    This is very, very old news.

    1. Re:Extremely old story ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell is this?!?!

      Your website is the same crap that's been around since the G5 was introduced. I could post some links, but I'm feeling lazy.

      No link.

      Regarding your site there, I guess I could find a thorough debunking of the whole thing, if only the whole thing was a thorough debunking. (If a woodchuck could chuck wood?)

      This post was a very, very, shoddy post. Kind of like your website?!?

  87. Games Shmames by maccw · · Score: 0

    For the love of God who cares. I like a good Game just as much as the rest of you. Is it a primary concern? NO! Thats because I am not 12 years old any more. I run a Design business on my Mac. The G5 is all about pumping out killer visuals. If its a better game platform great. Only a complete idiot would be a G5 for game performance.

    --
    My karma is getting better everyday.
  88. Re:Agur! by drzhivago · · Score: 1

    Games aren't multithreaded? Bring up a process viewer next time you are playing a game and tell me they run single threaded. The main game loop might be in a single thread and eat up as much CPU time as it can, but I assure you that games will use extra threads for various tasks.

  89. Re:mac gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, like Glider PRO, you troll. Those nine fans will keep your gliders in the air forever.

  90. These SPECs are not new by RalphBNumbers · · Score: 0

    Those SPEC scores for the G5 look like the same ones Apple gave when they first announced the G5s.
    This article is a dupe.

    --
    "The worst tyrannies were the ones where a governance required its own logic on every embedded node." - Vernor Vinge
  91. This is all good and well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..but does it play DIVX? You know, Apple always sucked when I wanted to play less-professional stuff like just a DIVX movie on it.

  92. Numbers aren't all that sell computers... by alchemist68 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple's Marketing department needs to show television commercials showing how EASY it is to network their computers to existing Windows and Linux corporate networks and continue running in the event of a virus/worm breakout in the Wintel world. Apple needs to show some compatibility with its computers if they ever intend on selling more units to new customers. Apple needs to show that its computers offer LOWER COST OF OWNERSHIP for many computing environments. I simply don't understand why Apple can't grow a spine and show a hint of agressive advertising. Apple has a really good product, both hardware and software, but people aren't going to buy their computers unless they know they aren't going to be stranded ALONE in the computing world when a slight hiccup occurs with hardware or software. One of my friends who works in business management put it like this: "I'm worried about support for software and hardware. Nobody uses Apples in business because they're not supported". While I disagree partially with my friend's statement, there is a little truth to it. If Apple's in the computer business to make money, it better start showing ADVANTAGES of its products compared to the DISADVANTAGES of competition, otherwise no one will notice their product offerings. With The Borg's long history of patches for its products not doing a very good job of protecting the security of networks, email, documents, etc... Apple could begin with an advertisement detailing those advantages.

    1. Re:Numbers aren't all that sell computers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe they are afraid of losing MS Office for Mac?

    2. Re:Numbers aren't all that sell computers... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 2
      Apple's Marketing department needs to show television commercials showing how EASY it is to network their computers to existing Windows and Linux corporate networks and continue running in the event of a virus/worm breakout in the Wintel world.

      Except that SMB services on Jaguar kinda suck. There are a number of bugs. WINS name resolution, for instance, doesn't work. So if you use NT Domain services (not Active Directory) you can't browse shares on a routed network. Bit of a problem for many corporate users. I submitted a bug report and nagged my Apple rep mercilessly, but they aren't going to fix it. Should be OK in Panther. I haven't used OS X with AD. Supposedly it works OK with just a little tweaking on the AD side.

      MOst of the Samba problems in OS X are pretty trivial, but hosed WINS is a deal breaker.
      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    3. Re:Numbers aren't all that sell computers... by scottgfx · · Score: 1

      Back in the day, a bunch of us on the Fidonet Amiga Echo would go on for days about what Commodore should do for marketing. "They should make a TV commercial that says...". I've been working in television for years and I've learned one thing... make it simple. If you start droning on about X, Y and Z you will loose the viewer. The G5 ad is one of the few commercials that make me turn around. I hear that "thwamp" of the guy hitting the tree and wonder what the heck is going on. (The TV in my office is almost behind me) Also, the use of music in Apple ads is very effective and I love the Pods United spot. I'm curious as to how involved Apple Creative was in the making of that spot.

      --
      It's mandatory to wash your hands before returning to the land of Dairy Queen.
  93. What games? by supabeast! · · Score: 1

    "...and for playing games."

    If you happen to be playing a game that actually supports multiple CPUs. Most games aren't.

    Chances are that the programmers won't spend time optimizing their x86 SSE/3DNow game engines for the G5 multimedia instructions. Good luck keeping up with x86 there.

    Nvidia fans are also semi-screwed, because Apply only sells the G5 computers with ATI cards; I hope you enjoy gaming with wacky ATI drivers.

    The new G5 systems are nice, and have their place, but Apple continues to suck in the high-performance gamining arena.

    1. Re:What games? by zpok · · Score: 1

      If you're into the most popular titles (quake, doom, rtcw, unreal) a G5 is as good a buy as any highly optimized (and prized) gaming machine...

      And btw Nvidia Gforce cards are standard on the G51.6 and 1.8Ghz.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    2. Re:What games? by greenerx · · Score: 1

      Umm, try buying a G5 1.8GHz, look at what graphics card comes with it.. NVidia

      The limitation is in the dual 2.0GHz

    3. Re:What games? by mcwetboy · · Score: 1

      Nvidia fans are also semi-screwed, because Apply only sells the G5 computers with ATI cards; I hope you enjoy gaming with wacky ATI drivers.

      Go to the Apple Store.

      Click on "Power Mac G5".

      Look at the specs for the 1.6 GHz model.

      You're welcome.

  94. Re:g5 problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    remove all your previous thoughts of mac if you have not used OS X it is an entirely different beast from classic mac OS, FreeBSD based underneath is only the start of the goodies.

  95. Re:auger-ment (Bad Python Pun) by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

    I'd like to have an augur-ment please... Certainly Sir, will this be the half hour augur-ment or the full course of 12?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  96. Re:Agur! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.veritest.com/clients/reports/apple/appl e_performance.pdf

    The mac used 1.5 GB of ram as seen on page 5

    dell used 2GB as seen at bottom of page 6

  97. Re:Agur! by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, when you have Photoshop, GoLive, Illustrator, BBEdit, iTunes, Mail, iChat, Safari, Mozilla, RBrowser, MacCVS, etc all open the same time... second processor becomes very very handy.

    I typically never noticed the benefits of an MP box until I start doing web development or design on a single processor system. There are noticeable delays when switching between tasks... even on a fast machine.

    But, hey, Apple has been selling MP boxes for years now. There are a lot of applications and games that take advantage of SMP on OSX.

    Buying an MP system from Apple was the best thing I ever did. My Dual 450 g4 still feels like new to me (as long as I'm not playing games)... even with modern software.

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  98. But can they sell it for less?! by zyglow · · Score: 1

    Who cares if its faster? The computers themselves are still over priced. The average user or company is not going to spend the money for a small increase of performance.

    --
    http://www.forum-addicts.com
    1. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once again you can't compare a home built pc with an Apple, select the best parts or go to Dell.com and configure it as close as possible, the G5 is still less than the Dull

    2. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Please this "Macs are more expensive thing" is much older than the "G5 benchmark debate". Educate yourself by viewing this study...

      http://www.macworld.co.uk/news/main_ne ws.cfm?NewsID=4795

      "Big Dark Coming Soon." Hunter S. Thompson

    3. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by zpok · · Score: 1

      Apple is not overpriced. You get what you pay for. It's pretty expensive, but if you can pay the initial price, it should turn out to be less expensive over the years. This does put a brake to most people's way of buying a computer - going for the lowest price and then upgrading it gradually - but there are excellent loan conditions.

      If - and that's the only way of looking at it - if you want to buy a mac, you'll find there are ways, and in the end you'll be saving both money and time.

      You might even come to like it. It's not for nothing that people so enthousiastically defend their macs, and no, it's not because of Jobs, I mean, look at the guy...
      (ohmygodwhatdidIsay-gottaconfessnow!)

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    4. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by zyglow · · Score: 1

      I'm not in any way trying to bash Apple. My point is that I think they would draw a larger crowd if they were to drop the prices on the machines. Granted, a Mac normally comes with higher qualtiy parts than say a Dell or HP, but I feel they are loosing market share by their price point.

      As for myself, Linux is my OS of choice. As long as the hardware can run it, I'm happy.

      --
      http://www.forum-addicts.com
    5. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by li99sh79 · · Score: 1
      I'm not in any way trying to bash Apple. My point is that I think they would draw a larger crowd if they were to drop the prices on the machines. Granted, a Mac normally comes with higher qualtiy parts than say a Dell or HP, but I feel they are loosing market share by their price point.

      And just how much does a Dell with dual P4s, a 23" LCD, SATA, PCI-X, Firewire 800, Superdrive, etc. cost? For what Apple puts in the box the price is fair. If you want low end buy an eMac or iMac.

      -sam

      --
      I was just here, where did I go?
    6. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by tomem · · Score: 1

      I'm looking at a Dell bid for a basic dual Xeon 3GHz, and it is coming out at 4k$ versus 3k$ for the basic Apple dual G5. Of the two, only the Apple gives me a DVD write drive. With the difference, I can pick up a laptop to talk with my beast while I'm away.

      I can match the Apple price if I drop back to dual Xeon 2GHz, which I suppose Dell would argue is parity, but the benchmarks don't seem to support that.

      Can who sell it for less?

      --
      ThosEM
    7. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      And just how much does a Dell with dual P4s, a 23" LCD, SATA, PCI-X, Firewire 800, Superdrive, etc. cost?

      Priceless.

      (hint: there's no such thing as a dual P4!)

    8. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by zpok · · Score: 1

      Was not implying you were bashing. However, market share isn't everything. As far as they're concerned, they have great market share and make good profit. Profit they largely put back into R&D. I think what they do is a nice way to do business, mostly, satisfying a very large and interesting crowd of users, developers and workers.

      I too would love a more barebones mac line with better initial prices, eMacs aren't everybody's cup of tea, but given the overhead such a strategy would give them, I doubt they'd go that road anytime soon. And I don't ever want them to return to the pre-Jobs line-up. If lack of choice is the price to pay for great products, so be it. It still beats the alternative for more than enough people.

      They are known to give great value and real innovation out of the box, there's a rather appreciative market with deep enough pockets for that, and they'd be very stupid to give it up for commodity another market already finds in Dell and Build-Your-Owns.

      It's true, Apple can't compete on price (that's store price, not cost of ownership), heck, no other computer brand can, apart from Dell. If price is the issue, there's still choice.

      And if eMacs or low-end iBooks don't do it for you, you can custom build your mac in the Online Store and apply for a loan - to spread the pain around- buy your own Ram and extra HDD's, Graphics card and have a very economical machine with great resell value.

      A good way to go is to buy a new mac every two years and - if you can part with it - sell your old mac. The resell value gives you a good edge. It helps to buy AppleCare as well, to be sure your investment doesn't go bust on freak accidents.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    9. Re:But can they sell it for less?! by li99sh79 · · Score: 1
      (hint: there's no such thing as a dual P4!)

      Fine Xeon, the point still stands

      -sam

      --
      I was just here, where did I go?
  99. The REAL Reason for P4 & Xeon Comparisons by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is all marketing. Apple is making comparisons against P4 and Xeon computers instead of the not yet shipping Athlon-64 systems to make people feel good about buying Apples. Too many Apple owners are belittled by their PC (and I don't mean Politically Correct) friends for having underpowered machines. These ads are intended mostly to give Apple owners ammunition to fight back now. The top-end desktop machines are on an even footing again, and that's the reputation Apple needs to re-establish.

    Marketing, pure and simple -- and effective.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  100. Re:Am I the only one... I have one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Opterons are out. Dual w/2 gigs of ram and an 80 gig hd for $1,700. Find me a dual G5 for that.

    So far, it runs XP very nicely and the RedHat Opteron beta incredibly fast. :)

    They are in the consumer market. They are backwards compatible with all the existing X86 software. They are incredibly fast, accept huge amounts of RAM (8 gig per cpu), have native Linux support, native Windows soon....

    Why would anyone consider a Mac or an Itanium? There is no downside to an Opteron.

  101. ports by siskbc · · Score: 1
    nd a number of game ports do explicitly take advantage of them.

    Ports being the operative word here. The big stumbling block to gaming on the mac isn't performance, it's titles. Only the very biggest games (read: blizzard) release concurrently for the mac and PC.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:ports by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      I rather wait a few months anyways. By that time, all the really stupid bugs have been picked out and fixed.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    2. Re:ports by siskbc · · Score: 1
      By that time, all the really stupid bugs have been picked out and fixed.

      Yeah, in the PC version. The port will have its own set. Or, I could wait a few months, buy the PC version which is now $20, and have no bugs.

      Not to mention which, it's frequently not just a few months - many great games never get to Mac.

      Go to any games store and notice the disparity in titles. You'd have to really be rationalizing to consider that an advantage.

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    3. Re:ports by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      No, the bugs are worked out of the mac version too.

      Recently, very few great games have never made it to mac.

      And as for games in stores, shelf space costs money, and goes to what is most likely going to be purchased. A PC game is more likely to be purchased, and as such gets more space.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    4. Re:ports by siskbc · · Score: 1
      No, the bugs are worked out of the mac version too.

      Right...eventually...a few months after the *port* is released. By which time the PC version is long-since stable.

      Recently, very few great games have never made it to mac.

      Well, you'd hardly know, would you? ;)

      And as for games in stores, shelf space costs money, and goes to what is most likely going to be purchased. A PC game is more likely to be purchased, and as such gets more space.

      Hey, I never said it wasn't a vicous cycle. But such it is, and I'll use my PC for gaming. Nothing else, mind you, but I'll use it for gaming.

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  102. Re:Agur! by shotfeel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How is running a dual proc machine going to help software that isn't traditionally multi-threaded?

    By allowing more than one program at a time to run well.

    For example, I might have iMovie capturing DV to an external FW drive while I also doing something like play one of the games that are available for the Mac. I've actually tried and been unable to get iMovie drop out on a dual 1 GHz Mac. No matter what I throw at it, including Finder copies to/from the same external FW drive iMovie is captuing to or firing up Win XP in VPC, iMovie keeps capturing that video without dropping a frame.

    Try that with a single processor machine!

  103. Not really... by Cranx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While most of us use the x86 architecture, both Windows and Linux run happily on a couple different processors, so we're not really "locked in" by conventional proprietary semaphores. This is more a matter of economics; the x86 is cheap, powerful and prolific, so it's what we use. We're far from "locked in" though.

  104. ha ha by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I see the Apple zealots have mod points today. :-)

    Yeah, go ahead, mod this one down too.

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
    1. Re:ha ha by dspisak · · Score: 1

      And I bet you believe in the liberal media conspiracy and jewish conspiracies too?

      Ohhh! Look out, here come the black helicopters!

      That's right, whenever your own narrow worldview gets challenged fabricate up a ricoculous conspiracy theory to explain it all away so your brain can rest easy in its Happy Place.

      Or you could acknowledge the fact that more people are into Mac's now then used to be thanks to OS X. And when I saw that I don't necessarily mean they own an Apple. Before I got my 12" PowerBook I was a bigtime x86 user and before that an Amiga owner. But when OS X came out I saw it was what Linux had failed to achive, a useable UNIX based desktop for novices and powerusers alike.

      As far as Apples being more expensive this is true to an extent in the desktop area. Servers and laptops however I feel are comptetively priced for the hardware package you get.

    2. Re:ha ha by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

      Um, what?

      I made a joke about the lack of games on the Mac. I was modded down. I didn't say they were more expensive. So why accuse me of that?

      What is your problem?

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
  105. Re:Agur! by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 3, Interesting

    and usually it will wait for the other threads to finish before continuing.

    Very few games take advantage of multiple CPUs. It takes a lot of work to get a modest advantage from a dual-CPU system when developing a game. Take a look at Carmack's .plan files from the time when he was developing Q3 to see how SMP came out in the first tries with the Q2 code base (hint: he actually slowed the game down by using both processors).

    --
    -PainKilleR-[CE]
  106. Apple Information Minister by N8F8 · · Score: 1

    Benchmarking results brought to you by the new Apple Information Minister.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  107. time to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey /. editors, its time to change that G4 icon

  108. Re:Yeah, right... by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

    The G5 may in fact be good, but Apple is still certainly lying on their benchmarks.

    Benchmarks are pretty much lies anyway. But I don't think they are lying more than anyone else.

    There is no such thing as a 'standard SPEC' benchmark', as Apple is free to choose whatever compilers they want with whatever compilation settings they way.

    No, but SPEC is a standard benchmark, as opposed to Apple's custom benchmarks of G4-optimized PhotoShop filters.

    With the last round of Apple benchmarks a couple months ago it was shown that they seriously crippled the compiler on the PC side, thus tilting the benchmarks in their favor.

    No. It was alleged that they seriously crippled the compiler. Specifically, that they disabled SSE2 and hyperthreading. The allegation that they disabled SSE2 was just plain false. And according to Apple, they did the tests with and without hyperthreading, and without HT their competition was faster, so they kept that one. And while they may spin things or doctor compilation settings, they don't straight-out lie about their procedures.

    I have every reason to believe they did the same thing with these benchmarks.

    I have every reason to believe that these are the same benchmarks.

    --
    I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
  109. to bad apple sucks! by SQLz · · Score: 0, Troll

    hahaha! Intel sucks and so does Windows ,AMD is the king!

  110. Apple benchmarketing by lederhosen · · Score: 1

    But they are only faster then the p4 that Apple
    benchmark. Read the artikle.

  111. PRICE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple's G5 is just a baby IBM mainframe - in a silver chassis.

    So you do have an upgrade path...


    and the IBM Mainframe upgrade is CHEAPER too!

  112. Augug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the results augur well for Apple G5 performance

    normal english words pls todd...

  113. Re:g5 problems by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    If the parent post you were responding to was the actual article, then yes I read it. If you were responding to another post, you might take a second look at your original post... it's at the top level.
    No, I did not miss your statementat the end of your post. No I was not flaming you. You stated that "in your experience" Mac OS had very poor multitasking. You didnt need to state that you hadn't tried OS X, that is self evident. I was merely pointing out that OS X has outstanding multitasking (and stability).
    Jeesh, what are you so defensive about? Afraid your IT manager might have dinner and drinks with another OS?

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  114. Re:Agur! by bluethundr · · Score: 1

    suggesting Apple makes far better use of its two CPUs than the Xeon machine....the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.'"

    But isn't life just a game? =)

    --
    Quod scripsi, scripsi.
  115. the initial benchmarks did compare to G4 and Intel by johnpaul191 · · Score: 1

    when the G5 was first unveiled they did have some data showing the G5 compared with a top of the line G4 and then the Intel offerings.

    I don't remember what the tests were, and if they did pull those down it might be to keep the rest of the machines looking valid. Xserve is not G5 yet, let alone iMac and everything else.

    i can tell you that when i played with a G5 (not in my house unfortunately) that it was WAY faster than any G4 i had used. yes, it was a 2 x 2 GHz... and it really made me think how old and slow my G4 at home was feeling. This is the first time i have really wanted to buy a newly released Mac right off the bat. if i had the money i think i would have pre-ordered. when people eventually play with them in stores, the machine will speak for itself. as for switchers, i dont know. but any Mac user will realize how fast they are right off the bat.

  116. Apple G5 notebooks right now would be bad move by SilentMajority · · Score: 1

    This is different from the desktop market where Apple's sales were much slower than their notebooks and they were getting crushed by AMD/Intel desktops in benchmarks. That is why they needed to start selling the G5 desktops ASAP but it doesn't make business sense to do the same with their notebooks right now.

    Speed is important in notebooks but not nearly as much as in desktops. Other factors like battery life, size and weight are sometimes more important to consumers (which is why most of us don't lug 8 lbs "desktop replacement" notebooks).

    The G4 notebooks are selling briskly so the smart thing to do for Apple is to wait until they sell enough existing G4 notebooks before introducing the G5 version. Announcing G5 notebooks now will hurt their notebook sales and selling G5 notebooks now might not dramatically increase their sales. It simply makes more sense for Apple to wait 1-2 years.

  117. Re:g5 problems by EatAtJoes · · Score: 1

    yeah, I always start top level posts with "Re:..." ?? figure it out genius. your /. filter is set too high to see the parent post.

    defensive? this is a MAC user saying this? After the requisite windoze insults and typical "ever heard of BSD" pretentiousness?

    and as for tone, your sig, sir, adds a insulting flair to everything you post.

  118. They use GCC by MCSR_Jake · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that noticed that the Apple benchmarks use GCC? Everyone knows that the Intel compilers slaughter GCC 3.x in performance comparisons especially where floating point performance is concerned. I'm all for the belief that the G5 is a superior CPU. However, I live in the real world where CPU performance is only part of the equation. If you look at spec's page, you can see the submitted results from Dell and Intel show the P4/Xeon scoring much higher than the G5. A more interesting test would be to see the two platforms compared using the best available compilers for each. I'm really an Apple fan. In fact, I'm writing this on a PowerBook so don't pick on me as an Apple hater.

    1. Re:They use GCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is there might not be a better compiler. AFAIK Apple actually uses gcc to build Mac OS, something going back to Next (supposedly the existence of the gcc objective c compiler is entirely due to next). You would think IBM would have an optimizing compiler for the 64-bit PowerPC, but it might not actually be ported to MacOS.

  119. Re:This is a pointless story. by zpok · · Score: 1

    You are seriously mental if your choice to purchase an Apple over a PC considers percentages in processor performance.

    True, but who said that when Apple was sloooooow?

    The main reasons for buying Apple are imo ease of use, stability, good software (even games, but not always the coolest - think Keeper 2), speed (measured in what you get done in real work instead of coaxing your computer) and maybe even coolness if I am honest.

    And now raw processor speed - if not ever a real argument - at least isn't a deterrent anymore.

    There you go.

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  120. Re:OH MAN I'M SO BAKED!!!! by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I don't have any of that, but if you want some more pot, I have access to some pretty potent wacky tabacky that I can try and FTP to you. Just go here and log in as "gdubya":

    ftp.whitehouse.gov

    Password is: letsroll

  121. What really matters by delirium+of+disorder · · Score: 1

    A clutch of other benchmarks have been released by Apple, including a Quake 3 benchmark at 1024x768 giving the G5 a score of 337 frames per second compared to the Pentium's 275.

    --
    ------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
    1. Re:What really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Am I the first person to notice that Apple's QuakeIII benchmarks from their white paper are quite simply wrong by a huge percentage?

      Look at the Anandtech.com's Q3 1024x768 CPU scaling benchmarks on the same chipset (Intel875P) as the Dell Dimension 8300 in the test with *lower* performing vid card (9700 vs the 9800 in apple's test) and tell me how it can score that low. Was Apple testing a 2GHz P4 CPU by mistake? Thats about where it should be by every Q3 bench I've seen with a modern mobo and an ATI R300 chipsetted GPU.

      There are some slight variations here (slightly different q3 engine versions, unsure what 3ghz intel 3GHz CPU (3.0c or 3.06) the Dell dimension is actually using.

      Anandtech

      Apple White Paper

      Augur your Comments, please.

  122. Or look at IBM's result. by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

    If you don't like VeriTest's testing methods, you don't get to use them in either case. I did a bit of digging on this and wrote it up on my website a while ago.

    Back in October 2002, IBM gave estimated SPEC results for the 1.8 GHz PPC970 with a SPECfp of 1057 and a SPECint of 937. Intel's own results for the 3.06 GHz P4 are SPECfp 1077 and SPECint 1088. Given that the P4 is running at a 70% higher clock speed and in the better integer case is only 16% faster--and in floating point operations is closer to 1%--I think it's difficult to make the case that the P4 is blowing any doors off. (If you extrapolate IBM's figures for what the 2 GHz G5 would do, it comes very close to parity with the P4 on integer and outstrips it on floating point.) The contention that two 2 GHz PPC970s would outperform two 3 GHz Xeons doesn't seem to be stretching things.

  123. Re:g5 problems by sammycourt · · Score: 1

    you guys know you are squabbling over a troll comment that has been repeated over and over here? The parent is basically posted on every apple story.

  124. Re:g5 problems by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    Quit crying you baby

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  125. Re:Agur! by Pope · · Score: 1

    Jedi Knight 2 IIRC is optimized for dual processors for the multiplayer games (which makes a LOT of sense), and UT2003 for the Mac will run sound routines on the other processor.

    Again, this is not sure, just trying to recall from what I read in the readme files.

    --
    It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  126. Re:g5 problems by EatAtJoes · · Score: 1

    nice. toodles

  127. Re:Agur! by neura · · Score: 1

    What parts of web development require one process to still be using up your CPU when you've switched to another app? I do web development/programming for a living and I never have more than one program actively doing anything at one time, with the exception of ftp'ing an entire directory in the background.

    The one thing that really makes a difference in how many apps you can have open and still be able to switch between apps quickly is the amount of RAM you have available. I noticed a huge difference when I went from 512M to 1G. If you don't have enough RAM for all of the applications to be loaded at the same time, you have to do a lot of disk swapping and your HD is a lot slower than your RAM. ;)

  128. Re:mac gaming by TrippTDF · · Score: 1

    To defend myself, I'm a Mac tech. I'm writing this on an iMac.

    The reference was to the guys who do the blood gulch chronicles. They did a mac parody ad.

    www.redvsblue.com

  129. Xeon? pffft by jon3k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I want to see Dual G5 vs. Dual Opteron, now *thats* a comparison :)

  130. Linux on Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Does RedHat Linux run on the G5?

    Specifically, can I avoid booting the G5 on Mac OS and install RedHat Linux on the hard drive? Are there ROM chips (within the G5) that lock you into the Mac OS?

    1. Re:Linux on Apple by Smurf · · Score: 3, Informative
      As far as I know RedHat doesn't have a version for PPC. On the other hand, I'm almost sure that Yellow Dog Linux is based on RedHat, and so is Mandrake for PPC. You can also find Debian, Suse, Gentoo and other non RH-like distributions for PPC.

      Now, to answer your question, I don't think that the G5 is supported yet by any of the distributions. Just give them some time (Yellow Dog is very diligent when porting to new models, and the rest follow naturally). I may be wrong on this, since IBM plans to use the PPC970 on some of their products and they would probably want to launch them with Linux.

    2. Re:Linux on Apple by godzilla808 · · Score: 1

      I saw the other day that Gentoo, for one, has a note on their site saying that a distro will be available soon for G5s.

      --
      ...///...
  131. ATI 9800 Pro by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

    ... and since you can get an ATI 9800 pro, the (arguably) fastest consumer graphics card in one, the games should fly.

    Most any good game that I want to play comes to the mac. I love my mac for gaming. If it doesn't come to the mac, I just play my PS2.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
  132. Re:Agur! by sakusha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have to agree, the multiple processor systems rock. I have a dual 1Ghz MDD machine, near the end of the line for the old G4 architecture (it's the last gen that can boot OS 9 natively, supposedly) and it is quite zippy. Don't underestimate the usefulness of dual processors. I use the old dead freeware gadget "Cycles" to watch both G4s in separate graphs, it's interesting seeing each processor's load. Apps like VPC monopolize one CPU for emulation, and offload OS and screen drawing tasks on the other processor. Some apps really max out everything, like Cleaner 6 or DVD Studio Pro, you can be up to about 98% CPU utilization on both processors, but the system is still responsive enough to toss it in the background and run other hefty apps, the main app will behave nicely and give up CPU cycles. My G4 CPU has improved memory bus bandwidth which made a really obvious improvement in performance doing tasks like encoding that are both I/O intensive and CPU-intensive. But the G5's memory bandwidth looks like it is at least 10x what my G4 can do.
    And there's one thing I think people haven't noticed. I looked at Shake 3 and Final Cut Pro, they use a new networked clustering controller called QMaster. It is a new background system service for rendering video out of Shake or FCP Compressor. You can control a whole render farm of Macs from your workstation with QMaster. This doesn't have to be a rack of XServes, it could just be the regular macs around the office. I think Apple's moving to a more networked, distributed processing model, this could be an incredible increase in computing power.

  133. Untrue by Frobozz0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At the most, MacPlay and Aspyr lag 2 years. To be honest, if it's that long they rarely ship with all the problems the PC version did. Obviously I'd like simultaneous release, which Blizzard has always done, but you can't have everything.

    The Mac is easier to use. Now it's also as fast (or significantly FASTER) the the PC. It runs all the commercial apps you need. It can emulate proprietary in-house apps with VirtualPC. It can play all the latest games, even if they laga couple months (get a PS2, also!). It's UNIX under the hood and runs X11 for added compatability. All of this, and it's not any more expensive than comparable PC hardware.

    It's time to take an objective look at these systems if you're in the market for a new machine. Just take a look. If you don't like it, then don't buy it... but the Mac is a VERY viable platform these days. More so now than ever.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    1. Re:Untrue by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      It can emulate proprietary in-house apps with VirtualPC.

      Uhh... You had everything right up until there. Currently, the G5 cannot run VirtualPC at all. Hopefully a software update will fix this. Other than that one significant flaw, they are great machines.

      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    2. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Matlab, solidworks, proE... how about it? Did anyone else notice that the G5 sports an AGP 8x PRO slot- allowing it to run certain workstation cards. I really do want the apple to be the 64 bit engineering workstation that used to cost more than... well, it'll be better than those. Yeah.

    3. Re:Untrue by GMontag451 · · Score: 1

      ProE is rumoured to be out for the Mac by the end of the year.

    4. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot:

      It costs twice as much as a build-it-yourself PC!
      You can't play all the latest games, only like 1 or 2 of them
      It's not really easier to use at all

      Mmm, ... mac?

    5. Re:Untrue by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      Matlab currently runs beautifully on my G4 Quicksilver. Mathworks (or whatever they are now) just rereleased this last August or something. Runs nicely though. Can't speak for the others you mentioned however.

      bkr

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    6. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can turn your sarcasm detector back on now.

    7. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It costs twice as much as a build-it-yourself PC!
      You can't play all the latest games, only like 1 or 2 of them
      It's not really easier to use at all


      You forgot :

      You don't have to build it yourself, (I know I sure as hell don't have time to research components the way I used to), not everybody cares about playing every game there is on every computer they own (Just keep your grubby hands off my PS2), and it sure as shit is easier to use, and a hell of a lot more pleasant to work with (I'm a Windows admin, feel my pain.)

      They also have a hell of a lot of resale value -- I know for sure that I'll be able to sell this PowerBook for 50%+ of the price next year. Don't even pretend you can do the same for a PC.

    8. Re:Untrue by coreytamas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "It costs twice as much as a build-it-yourself PC!
      You can't play all the latest games, only like 1 or 2 of them
      It's not really easier to use at all"


      I'm glad you posted this because it's a good example of how a lot of the public doesn't understand the current G5 situation.

      Three points:

      1. Get a dual-CPU (2 Ghz each) 64-bit computer complete with 128-bit DDR RAM, 1 Ghz motherboard w/8X AGP and nine slow-speed fans. Add a CD/DVD burner. Add a Radeon 9800 Pro. Add a 80GB-or-larger hard disk. Add optical audio, PCI-X and firewire 800. Don't forget the case. If that PC costs half as much as a G5, well guess what? I still wouldn't buy it because I'd rather have a stable-as-hell operating system with a great interface that keeps UNIX under the hood.

      2. Does your digital camera require drivers? Does your wireless networking card? Does your MP3 player? Does your printer? So far on OS X I haven't had to install drivers for any of this stuff. Still not convinced that it's easier to use? Try this: Put your Soundblaster Platinum in the PCI slot next to your ATI All-in-Wonder. Now sit your grandmother down in front of your PC and have her figure out why it is that one or both of them don't work. My grandmother wouldn't be able to do it, but she uses OS X on a daily basis and isn't the least bit hindered by random problems, conflicts or other mishaps. The Mac isn't perfect, I will grant that, but I won't budge on the fact that it is most definitely easier to use, especially for those who don't know a lot about computers.

      3. If you think the Mac only has one or two of the latest games... dude... that's the kind of talk that doesn't say "I'm trying to make a point". It's the kind of talk that says "I just want to make fun of the Mac without having to know anything about it"

      Don't get me wrong; I don't strive to be a Mac evangelist. I just like to play on the level field of fact vs. fact.

      Corey

      --


      www.macgamer.com
    9. Re:Untrue by charnov · · Score: 1

      1 & 2 are almost exactly the same for PC's running either Linux (okay...there are some driver issues, but my 82 year grandfather didn't have any trouble with Suse) or Windows XP on an Opteron system (except you dont need a dual 2 Ghz to get there and it cost almost half as much).

      --
      [RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
    10. Re:Untrue by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 0, Troll

      "The Mac is easier to use."

      AFAIK, there are no actual studies that prove this (except an Apple-sponsored Gartner study that was recalled by Gartner), so this is a 100% subjective thing. Also, I'm already familiar with Windows, thus better "ease of use" means nothing to me.

      "Now it's also as fast (or significantly FASTER) the the PC."

      We've seen benchmarks from one company, Apple. Well, by your logic, AMD's Athlon XP 3200+ is signifigantly faster than the P4 3.2ghz. We all know how false that is. Apple's released SPECMarks don't impress me. On single processor tasks (e.g. 90% of all code), in integer mode (also 90% of code), even Apple's benchmarks say that the PC is faster. Apple only wins in the rates and in fp. If you have nice, multithreaded code, and code that requires lots of fp, you might see a benefit... or not. Apple's benchmarks use GCC; most production code will use the faster ICC. As better compilers emerge for the PPC970, the gap between optimized PC performance (over 1000 in the specints vs. ~800 on the dual G5) may shrink or even reverse, but there is no telling how long that will take.

      So, "Just As Fast" or "Faster" is an extremely dubious claim to be making now.

      "It runs all the commercial apps you need."

      Sonic Foundry Vegas 4? Acid Pro? Sound Forge? Paint Shop Pro?

      These are the tools I use regularly. They happen to be considerably cheaper than the Mac equivilents. And they fit my workflow.

      Is there commercial software for the Mac? Yes. Is it "all I need"? Not even remotely.

      "It can emulate proprietary in-house apps with VirtualPC."

      Well, yeah, but then you need a Virtual PC license and a Windows license.

      "It can play all the latest games, even if they laga couple months (get a PS2, also!)."

      Hmmmm... I don't think so. "All the latest games" is a very strong claim. One that I doubt you can back up. All means everything.

      "It's UNIX under the hood and runs X11 for added compatability."

      It's UNIX under the hood. Wow. That's some kind of a great feature, I'm sure. For POSIX compliance, Windows has cygwin. I can even run KDE under Win32. And you can always run Linux on a PC... or a Mac.

      "All of this, and it's not any more expensive than comparable PC hardware."

      Bzzzt.... wrong answer. Maybe if you compare to Xeon, but Xeon is extremely overpriced. Apple's $2000 G5 (1x1.6ghz G5, 256MB PC2700 DDR, GeForceFX 5200 64M, 80GB SATA HDD) is actually a mid-range PC.
      A similar HP Pavilion (2.6Ghz P4, 256M PC2700 DDR, 80GB 7200rpm HDD, 4X DVD+R/RW, GeForceFX 5200 128M) is less than half the cost ($929.99). Faster Processor (Even if you go by Apple's FP numbers; the rates don't apply on 1P systems), same amount of memory, better GPU, and a similar HDD, and a DVD burner. And it's less than half as much.

      So, equivalently priced, yet twice as expensive? Quite a contradiction here.

      "It's time to take an objective look at these systems if you're in the market for a new machine. Just take a look. If you don't like it, then don't buy it... but the Mac is a VERY viable platform these days. More so now than ever."

      Your right, it is time to take an objective look. The numbers don't lie. Mac's are more expensive. The're more proprietary. They have less available software. And not even Apple's $3000 computer can beat a $1200 PC (that same Pavilion, with a 3Ghz P4) in SPECInt, by their own numbers. Apple's product is the same that it's always been - spectacularly marketed, overpriced, underperforming equipment. You might say that the're the BOSE of the computer industry.

    11. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the public doesn't understand the current G5 situation it's because of all the lies coming from Cupertino on the subject.

      "Don't get me wrong; I don't strive to be a Mac evangelist"

      No, obviously that's just what you strive for. You don't know the facts about XP at all. You don't know that none of the things you mention need drivers. You don't know that XP is probably more stable than MacOS X. You don't know that there are many Firewire 800 cards for Windows machines and that they're cheap. You don't know that more fans is not necessarily better. You are obviously not aware that several dual Opteron machines are available now, can be built into full systems that cost less than the G5 and you're also unaware that many more will soon be available. You're amazingly ignorant of the fact that Apple has chosen to ignore dual Opteron systems in benchmarking because they would make the G5 look rather weak. (I'm amazed they had the guts to compare against the two-year-old dual Xeon technology - still 32 bit, and BEATS the G5!) You're blissfully oblivious of the fact that most PC mainboards come with optical audio I/O, gigabit ethernet, SATA raid and dual channel memory. Oh how it would suck to know as little as you and to deny it.

      (P.S. Creative products [and their crappy spyware drivers] are for idiots who like to get their technology at Best Buy. So sorry if that's you.)

      "www.macgamer.com" - world's smallest website! See our exclusive review of Marathon! Please don't play EV Nova on your windows machine, even if it is less buggy and runs faster...

    12. Re:Untrue by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      There must be something wrong with mine I have a 733 Mac G4, but it seems like 2 times slower than my P3-933 that sits next to it.

    13. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh* -- where to begin? SoBig.F. Welchia32. MSBlaster.exe. And almost 70,000 other pieces of crap that exist only to make life on Windows miserable. Zero viruses for MacOS X. XP more stable? What planet are you on? When you've had to remove Welchia32 from someone's network because ONE machine was left without virus protection, you can talk. Oh, and since people love to make all kinds of lame excuses for the Swiss Cheese security model of Win2K/XP, read Rick Forno's excellent article "Forget California, It's Time to Recall Microsoft" here.

    14. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why was this modded troll? Wrong, perhaps, but not a troll.

      Anti-Windows/PC, Pro-Mac/Anything Else Slashdot at its finest.

    15. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      all pc users do is trash the mac. it's all disinformation, and i never see any examples of how the pc is better.


      if all they can do is be negative, it tells you a little bit about their computing experience.


      makes you wonder why the mac user base is always so positive, doesn't it? it's because we're having a better time with our boxes.


      enjoy those windows now, boys.

    16. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know and I don't care about many of these things, what I do care about is that I have to reboot my XP system (2Ghz) a few times a day, and my G4 (800Mhz) has been running fine without restart for weeks. Also on day-to-day tasks the mac is always faster, I've never in my life heard an mp3 skip on a mac, no matter what im doing in photoshop and lightwave at the time, whereas on the XP mp3s skip when i launch IE. The only thing the XP seems to be good for to me is Star Wars Galaxies (which I should add is alot of fun :)
      Tschus!

    17. Re:Untrue by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      "all pc users do is trash the mac. it's all disinformation, and i never see any examples of how the pc is better."

      OK,

      1: More software. Period.
      2: Cheaper hardware. The 1.6Ghz G5 is $2000. A similarly equipped P4 2.8Ghz Pavilion (Yes, with a DVD burner) is less than $1000.
      3: Upgradibility. What if I want to put a DVD+RW in my PowerMac G5? What about an HDTV tuner card? Whatever I buy, it will likely work with Windows; the same can not be said of a Mac.
      4: Choice. I can get a Mac from one vendor. I can get PCs from hundreds of small and large vendors, and if I don't like what they have, I can get one fully custom built - or custom build my own. Don't like a particular style of case? There are thousands of designs to choose from. There are essentially six models of Macs (G5, G4, iMac, eMac, iBook, PowerBook). Just one PC vendor has more models than that. There's everything from the 3lb Sony Picturebook to a 12lb desktop in a laptop. I can even choose processors from 4 different companies (Transmeta, Via, AMD, Intel) - more if you include older x86 processors. Pentium 4, Pentium III, Athlon XP, Opteron, Athlon 64, Xeon, C3, Eden, Crusoe.

      4 good reasons to choose a PC.
      Oh, and Macs are not "easier to use". Show me the studies that prove this. They may be more secure, but Windows gets better with every service pack and hotfix. Every major worm in the past year has had a patch released at least one month before it hit. Microosft's "Security Push" is paying off.

    18. Re:Untrue by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      Personal attacks rearely help you position. Aside from highly iased "facts" and lack of ANY shred of evidence, I'd like to thank you for invalidating everything you said by sounding like a looney.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
  134. FUD by Frobozz0 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Please stop spreading FUD. This is NOT old news. It's new. Apple updated their scores, and now there are production low end machines that have been tested.

    And, we've all seen the "I'm jealous so I'm going to debunk this" website. Next.

    You can chose to use a Mac or not. At worst case scenario the Mac is maybe 5 to 10% slower, which is not perceivable to a human unless you're running a multiple day long task. At best, the Mac is 200% faster. That's noticable in the timeframe of a second.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    1. Re:FUD by Ninja+Programmer · · Score: 1
      Please stop spreading FUD. This is NOT old news. It's new. Apple updated their scores, and now there are production low end machines that have been tested.


      The why do all the numbers look exactly the same as the original numbers posted? I followed the links in all directions and could not find new numbers anywhere. All the same old number, all the same old lies.
  135. Interesting verb choice by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
    the results augur well
    So the results bring animal entrails to mind, eh?
    Or maybe the author is just a Gene Wolfe fan. Go, Silk!
    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  136. No kidding... by FatSean · · Score: 1

    I mean, all companies lie a little on their benchmarks but they are usually smart enough not to rub their 'enhanced' numbers in your face. They know that people will catch on and think them really dishonest. Apple hasn't quite figured that out. I may buy a 'G5' system, but it won't be from apple.

    --
    Blar.
  137. Double speak? or you just forgot what you said? by Transcendent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    the G5 edged out the Xeon 17.2 to 16.7 in the integer score and 15.7 to 11.1 in the floating point tests, suggesting Apple makes far better use of its two CPUs than the Xeon machine

    Edging out now implies that it's far better?

    1. Re:Double speak? or you just forgot what you said? by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      How fast were the Xeons? The article doesn't seem to say. If they were at significantly higher clock speed, then yes, Apple really is making far better use if it can keep up with that handicap.

    2. Re:Double speak? or you just forgot what you said? by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Edging out now implies that it's far better?

      No, edging out on dual-processor ops, when it was behind on other ops, does indicate that it makes far better use of multiple processors.

      If I ran a program on a 200Mhz processor, that edged out a similar program on a supercomputer, that would indicate that the program running on the 200MHz computer is far freakin' better.

      A dramatic example, but just making a point.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  138. Only for a WELL REGULATED MILITIA by gothamboy · · Score: 1

    You left out that little part about a WELL REGULATED militia: 2nd Amendment: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. Read the rest of the constitution to see how it uses the word militia to get an understanding of what was intended. I support the right to own guns, but don't hide behind an improper quoting of the constitution. USE THE WHOLE SENTENCE!

    1. Re:Only for a WELL REGULATED MILITIA by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 1
      I invite you to parse the following sentence(the bulk of which makes up my sig):

      A well-schooled electorate, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and read Books, shall not be infringed."

      Now tell me, had this been in the Bill of Rights, how could you conceivably use this to keep individuals(as opposed to voting members of an electorate) from owning books?

      If you would like to see how an English professor dissected this sentence, read here.

      It's perfectly proper to infer that the Bill of Rights writers intended the 2nd amendment to extend ownership of arms to individual citizens.

      --

      No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

  139. keeping up by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

    the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.'"

    What this means is that Apple is roughly keeping up in the CPU race: they just shipped a new CPU. You expect newly shipping CPUs to have an edge. But since it's only moderately faster than the currently shipping P4 or Opteron systems and only in certain situations, it means they are really just keeping up, not leaping ahead.

    Given the higher price of G5 systems, bang for the buck still goes to the x86-based systems.

  140. Re:Am I the only one... I have one by Nugget · · Score: 1

    Not being able to run OS X is the downside of an Opteron. As far as I'm concerned, Apple hardware is just an expensive hardware key required to run OS X.

  141. Re:Agur! by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

    Jedi Knight 2 IIRC is optimized for dual processors for the multiplayer games (which makes a LOT of sense),

    This makes sense if you're hosting and playing on the same machine, but otherwise I don't see the reasoning for it. For the most part, the processing done in Quake-based games (as JK2 is iirc) is the same in a single player game as a multiplayer game, except that in most multiplayer games you aren't running the server process on your own computer (in single player you spawn a server that runs the single player routines and doesn't utilize the network).

    and UT2003 for the Mac will run sound routines on the other processor.

    This might make sense if you're using it to run background sounds or you're just triggering the sounds on a thread run on a seperate processor. I fail to see how this helps much, though, unless you don't have good sound hardware to begin with (hmm, I wonder what sound API they're using in UT for the Mac and Linux ports). Of course, UT (and UT2k3 I would assume, though I haven't looked at a lot of UT2k3 benchmarks) does tend to be more CPU-limited than most games, so maybe every little bit helps.

    --
    -PainKilleR-[CE]
  142. Some Notes About the Test by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

    Most interesting is that The G5 seems to perform extremely well on a few tests and very very poorly on a few tests. This could easily be because Photoshop7, even with the plug-in, is not yet fully optimized for the G5. I would find this likely, seeing as when the plugin was released and its relative size compared to photoshop. It is the only platform, for this test, where the first 12 tests performed radically different than the last 9--the first 12 being selected arbitrarily based on someone telling me that those were the ones that he used in real life.

    I would say to look to Photoshop 8 for the most significant performance gains--such as a complete recompile for the G5, removal of all of the vec_dst() commands everywhere, etc.

    Also I've heard a couple anecdotes that people's computers have been running photoshop faster when they installed panther development code. Panther should also be more heavily optimized to take advantage of the G5's, so it should be interesting to see the results.

    Finally, the PSBench test that was run was on a 50 MB file. The one from Apple, which scored so well, was on a 600 MB file. 50 MB files don't stress the pipelines in any of the systems, but a 600 MB file almost certainly would. For that kind of work the G5 would rapidly close the gap in those areas where it is lagging, simply because of the size of its pipes. The G5 is going to absolutely shine when a lot of data transfer with the processor is required.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  143. Giants, etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think I remember one of the guys that did Giants: Citizen Kabuto for Macintosh saying how they were taking advantage of multiprocessing for things like sound and so, and how they were seeing a real advantage in fps, etc.

    Ah, here it is:

    "...MacPlay is thrilled to bring a graphical marvel like Giants: Citizen Kabuto to Mac OS X," said Mark Cottam, President of MacPlay. "The talented engineers at Omni Group have implemented SMP (Symmetric Multi Processor) support into Giants, which takes advantage of Mac OS X's symmetric multiprocessing feature when running the dual processor Power Mac G4..."

    "To illustrate the point, he discussed Giants: Citizen Kabuto - the game recently ported to OS X by the Omni Group: "It was originally written in Direct3D, a Windows environment. We not only got the game working in a month, but also got it running faster on a year-old Mac than it runs on the fastest PC we could buy today.
    We did this by taking their code and rewriting parts of it so it's actually multi-threaded now, so that on a multi-processor machine it'll use both processors. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that any game-porting company has taken an existing game and made it use symmetric multiprocessing when it wasn't originally designed to do so..."

  144. yawn by sageFool · · Score: 1

    Another lame slashdot post that offers no real insight regardless of it's mod and takes the tired, tired approach of snubbing apple for no other reason than they appear upset apple is making products that might actually be competing for the cutting edge. Oh god, not that! NOOOO! Yawn Yawn, I need to stop reading slashdot, the trolls rule this town, the level of intelligence is so low it is sad. Look at this post for gods sake. Oye.

  145. *Not* locked into a platform by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    If I had an Intel/AMD box, I'd be more locked into a platform than with my Mac. Why? Virtual PC allows me to run Windows (or any x86 operating system) simultaneously with Mac OS X. You can even copy-'n-paste between Windows apps and Mac apps.

    In fact, Virtual PC allows me to run multiple x86 operating systems (say, Win '98, Win XP, OpenStep, and QNX) simultaneously with each other, too.

    Does the x86 emulation cause a performace hit? It's only noticable in the most demanding apps.

    And of course, Linux runs natively on Macs.

    In summary, I can run Windows apps on my Mac, but you can't run Mac apps on your PC. I'm less locked into a platform than you.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  146. Apple benchmark?!?! Why belive them by LocalHero · · Score: 1

    Im sick of this. Everybody buys apples own benchmark. Hello, Hello, anybody home. Why would they benchmark something that the G5 doesnt do good.

    Take a look at this link. I tried to post a story about it but it got rejected. Probably because the reader was a great apple addict.

    http://www.theandyzone.com/Computer/shootout.htm l

    I dont know about how they did the test but acording to it a G4 or a G5 doesnt perform better then a Athlon Xp 2000+.

    So we might consider that for a while also. I know that the real performance might be in betwean but why do people think that Apples benchmark is the ultimate truths.

  147. two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Otto Matic. You'll never need another game.

  148. If you do that... by Paradox · · Score: 1

    Then you make the comparison totally meaningless. That's like saying my friend on the bus beats me when I'm walking, therefore my friend on the bus is a faster. He may weigh 600lbs and need a walker to pee without falling over, but by the logic you're describing, he'd be faster.

    You're right, GCC is not making good code for a P4, compared to what Intel's mature compiler can do. Apple, having just migrated to a very new type of PPC processor, has NO MATURE COMPILER. None. So the code they're making on GCC is also quite suboptimal. In fact, the code from GCC generated for a 970 is probably significantly worse than the code generated for a P4 on average. P4s are older, and there is a larger developer interest in almost every case.

    So, it's not like Apple is somehow tying the P4 up and leaving it on the train tracks. Apple still gives Intel products the advantage. Until they can get a good optimizing compiler they have to do so. Apple is pulling dead even with machines much more expensive, faster, and with better tricks for accessing RAM in a speedy fashion. They are matching throughput against machines that, by Intel's numbers, should be beating them hands down no question.

    Everyone likes to say a cheap-ish P4 is coming up dead even with Apple's most expensive system. I'd also like to point out the flipside of that coin, P4s are tying with Xeons which are much more expensive and are "supposed to be better". What do you suppose that means? Does it mean that this whole G5 and Xeon thing is stupid, and we should all just use P4s?

    Maybe it means these benchmarks, while standard, are stupid, and not taking everything into account. It could also mean that Intel is HEAVILY optimizing for the SPECmarks. We know that Intel does it, by their own admission and people pointing out code generation hints.

    So yeah, right now, Apple has a machine with no optimized compiler, and no OS to take advantage of it. However, it's keeping up with the best that intel has to offer in an even playing field, compared completely optimized Intel it only comes out slightly behind. These benchmarks show that the G5 is insanely fast, not insanely behind. Apple is taking every handicap and still coming up dead even. All they ask is that the field itself isn't at a ridiculous slant against them, hence the use of GCC to make the comparisons meaningful in any way.

    Doesn't anyone get this?

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  149. sigh.. not again. by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    I wont go into this deeply as I'm tired of explaining it to people.

    The militia is composed of the private citizens of a country. ( non professional military ).

    Therefore the people have this right.

    Using a shortened version of the amendment for a signature does nothing to diminish the statement. I only left out the reasoning of why, not its intent.

    Also, well regulated translates to well trained, when you account for the difference in definition over time.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  150. Interesting numbers.... by pantherace · · Score: 1
    http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/rfp2000.h tml

    Anyone want to explain that?
    Advanced Micro Devices: A4800 (1.4GHz Opterons, 4GB RAM ): 2 CPU: 21.0 base : 22.2 peak
    Apple Computer: Dual PowerPC G5 2GHz: 2 CPU: 15.7 base: no peak
    Dell: PowerEdge 2650 (3.06 GHz Xeon): 2CPU: 16.7 base:17.0 peak
    Dell: Precision WorkStation 350 (3.06 GHz P4): 1 CPU: 12.7 base: 12.8 peak

    Or this: http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/cfp2000.h tml
    Intel Corporation: D850MD motherboard (2.4 GHz, P4): 1 CPU: 806 base: 812 peak
    Apple: G5 2GHz: 1 CPU: 840 base: no peak
    HP: ProLiant DL380 G3(3.06GHz, Intel Xeon): 1 CPU: 1150 base: no peak

    I could go on, these just happen to be ones I selected. I abreviated some names (HP=Hewlett-Packard Company) and procs (P4) etc, but did not change the information, the numbers for apple were taken from http://www.apple.com/powermac/

  151. Bots! by yerricde · · Score: 1

    The real benefit is when you're running multiple applications, so you can dedicate one processor to the game and one processor to the rest of your applications, and hopefully minimize the performance hit from multi-tasking.

    Either that or run the game on one CPU and the bots on the other.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  152. You Pass the test by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    The misspelling was intentional, as a test to see if anyone actually reads comments.. Congratulations you win!

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  153. Re:Agur! by zdislaw · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that the parent was speaking specifically of games. Not something you usually iMovie running alongside.

    --
    bad sig...no donut.
  154. Re:g5 problems by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    damn, you got the last word. :(

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  155. Next Poll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'i got a mac (blah blah blah) i got a gamecube'

    Interesting. I kinda think of Apple and Nintendo as similar. The styling of their boxen, i guess. I wonder how the two types of hardware ownership correlate...

    new /. poll

    I have:

    _Mac and Gamecube
    _Mac and PS2
    _Mac and Xbox
    _PC and Gamecube
    _PC and PS2
    _PC and Xbox
    _COWBOY NEAL AND DREAMCAST, BABY! OH YEAH!

    Adam

  156. Quake2(3?) by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

    Well, John Carmack did implement SMP for Quake2 or Quake3(don't remember which one at the moment). But I clearly remember it resulted in a 20-25% performance boost that really helped in heavy firefights.

    The Quake2 source is available, but I haven't tested it on my smp rig.

    Kashif

    1. Re:Quake2(3?) by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 1

      It was for Quake3, and a 20-25% speedup was the goal, but the actual result was MUCH less, to the extent that it usually ran slower on dual-processor machines.

      The simple fact of the matter is that in games, there is usually just ONE thread that is doing heavy processing at any given time, and it's extremely difficult to get around that. Sure, you can offload things like sound and the odd other thing to a secondary processor, but usually one chip ends up working full out 100% of the time with the other chip being idle 99% of the time. The nature of the work on most games just doesn't parallize all that well, besides which there is such a TINY market for dual-processor gaming machines that no one really bothers for it much.

      If you want a gaming machine, you get a fast single processor machine with an even faster graphics card.

    2. Re:Quake2(3?) by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, I recall quite fondly that Carmack said that Quake3 spends 75% of its time within the graphics driver.

      I've can't speak for graphic driver writers, but couldn't some concurrency be achieved within drivers?

      Kashif

  157. Dual processor macs by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Under OS X, the benefits of dual processors are quite evident. I find that a dual-450 MHz G4 Mac "feels" decidedly more snappy than my 800 MHz G4 Powerbook. It didn't seem nearly as fast under OS9; OS X seems to do a very good job of distributing the load over two processors.

  158. Again, no Dual-AMD by scosol · · Score: 1

    Gee I wonder why?

    We all know the Xeon is P3.5-class, dual P4s (if available) would likely urinate on the G5.

    Dual Opterons would likely urinate on the G5s with enough force to knock it off the table...

    And I can buy a dual-proc Opteron board at Fry's TODAY.

    Cmon Apple...

    --
    I browse at +5 Flamebait- moderation for all or moderation for none.
  159. Re:Agur! by tgibbs · · Score: 1
    By allowing more than one program at a time to run well.

    And you always have more than one program running; minimally, the Finder and various OS services.

  160. Re:ADC Student Developers get a 20% hardware disco by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just verified the $2499 you mentioned -- this price includes the $99 student membership fee.

  161. Reading Apple's comments on the benchmark by MagicBox · · Score: 1

    After the usual bashing of Intel's chips they have a little paragraph in fine print: "World's fastest" based on SPEC(R) CPU 2000 benchmark results and leading professional application performance tests against 3 GHz Pentium 4-based Dell Dimension 8300 and 3.06 GHz Dual Xeon-based Dell Precision 650. SPEC(R) CPU 2000 benchmarks run with GCC 3.3 and independently tested, full report available from Veritest; professional applications tested by Apple, June 2003." ..professional application tested by Apple.... Will we ever see unbiased benchmarks?

    --

    The phaomnneil pweor of the hmuan mnid. Fcuknig amzanig eh!
    1. Re:Reading Apple's comments on the benchmark by LocalHero · · Score: 1

      Hehe, i posted a similar post just some lines above. Take a look at this link for example. Oki, it might not be the best test but it hasent been done by apple and in this test a simple Athlon xp 2000+ is better than g5

      http://www.theandyzone.com/Computer/shootout.htm l

  162. Proprietary Hardware + Poor Hardware Selection by Nazmun · · Score: 0

    Because it's a closed platform you don't have multiple vendors for things like motherboards. Also things like video cards and everything else costs twice as much as the pc version.

    Besides, even with the G5 the price is still not worth buying the mac. Have you looked at their G5 series? The hardware choice in it is very poor. The systems without the dual cpu system comes with extremely poor graphics cards. They come with the geforcefx 5200 which is far slower then the older generation 4200 by nvidia. It's hard to believe they'd put a $60 pc video card in a $2000 dollar machine.

    You can easily build a $2000 dollar PC with a very fast processor (a p4 3.2 ghz is more then enough) and very fast everything else. With that kind of money you can easily get a rocket raid card and have a raid 0 array of multiple hard drives for awesome disk performance. You can also spend up to $400 to get an awesome video card for extreme graphics.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
    1. Re:Proprietary Hardware + Poor Hardware Selection by jedrek · · Score: 1

      Hell, I can put together a brand new dual athlon system for like $700-800, used for like $500. I'm supposed to spend $3000 on a Mac? Yeah, right.

    2. Re:Proprietary Hardware + Poor Hardware Selection by TomGroves · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hell, I can get a brand new Kia for $12,000. Spend $30,000 on a Volvo? Yeah right!

    3. Re:Proprietary Hardware + Poor Hardware Selection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except, he was comparing Ford to Chevy.

      Please desist in pretending your Mac is a sports car. It's a plastic box.

    4. Re:Proprietary Hardware + Poor Hardware Selection by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      "Please desist in pretending your Mac is a sports car. It's a plastic box."

      Well, if you have a G5 or one of the new powerbooks (12" or 17"), its an aluminum box.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  163. Game companies won't support multiple CPU's by tempshill · · Score: 1

    Parent comment is correct. Game companies have no motivation to optimize games for multiple CPU's. Over 99 percent of game consumers have single-CPU systems, and the game developers and publishers will always choose (correctly) to assign a programmer to some game feature rather than to assign a programmer to make the game ~twice as fast on the systems of 1% of their consumers.

  164. Mod parrent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Parrent is correct. Check the old article for yourself.
    These are the same old SPEC numbers, not anything new.

  165. I'd like to point out by soft_guy · · Score: 1

    that while the G5 is much faster at floating point math, Apple has cleverly designed their graphics subsystem to be based on floating point math.

    One of the things I was struck by when I started using Quartz (the new graphics system) is that all the coordinate systems are based on floats. (For example, CGRect is all floats.) Plus, NSTimer (CFTimer) uses floats for everything. So does the event system.

    So, the upshot is that the better performance for floating point isn't as isolated as you might think if you're coming from the x86 world or MacOS 9.

    --
    Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
  166. Apples and oranges... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why aren't they comparing the G5 against the new AMD 64 bit chips?

    It's because those new 64 bit AMD chips are much faster than the G5. The Platform that apple is running on is _still_ a generation behind x86 performance.

    1. Re:Apples and oranges... by piznut · · Score: 1

      Because, as Apple so cleverly put it, Opterons are for workstations and not desktops. Or something like that.

  167. Not accurate by SoupaFly · · Score: 1

    Not quite true and not the full story. According to this article, the G5 dissipates about 42 watts at 1.8 Ghz. The dual processor systems would dissipate about 84 watts. The P4 2.8 Ghz chips dissipate 68.4 watts.

    The heat is too high for a laptop though. The 1.2 Ghz 970s run around 20 watts. [source]

  168. Re:Please look at the Dell results at the SPEC sit by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Manufacturers like Dell tend to use the compiler that produces the fastest benchmarks. Sometimes, that is a compiler that isn't really reliable enough to be used for anything other than benchmarks. It's worth noting that when Craig Hunter at NASA tried to compare the G5 against other processors, he found that some of the compilers that produced the fastest code (such as the Intel compiler) failed to produce correct results.

  169. Who Cares? by Suppafly · · Score: 0, Troll

    Honestly, who cares about Apple benchmarks? The only people that believe them are Apple enthusiasts and Jeff Goldblum, everyone else knows that it has been a long long time since Apple has had comparable speeds to wintel hardware. People don't buy Apple because it's fast, they buy it because its cute, allegedly easier to use, or because of blind fanaticism.

  170. Re:Agur! by yunfat · · Score: 0, Troll

    Um... Quake 3 came out on mac first... we have all the important games. Doom 3 will also be on mac, other games on pc that are actually worth playing are few and far between. PC players get a few FPS's and hardcore strategy games mac users don't, so what?

    Consoles more than makeup for the shortfall, and can be had for little more than the cost of a few games. The number of pc games will decrease as the number of consoles increase, get used to it, pc AND mac users will soon be looking at gaming from the outside.

    --
    "Smokey, this isn't Nam, there are rules." -Walter
  171. Neverwinter Nights by manonthemoon · · Score: 1

    Just picked up Neverwinter Nights for $5 from MacPlay... I think that is as cheap if not cheaper than you can find it for Windows.

  172. MIPS corp MIPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not sure what the parent meant about China going to MIPS, but MIPS cores rarely end up in high end chips. Instead they end up in all sorts of embedded stuff or with coprocessors. Only SGI, so far as I know, tries to keep MIPS ISA based designs close to the high end.

    1. Re:MIPS corp MIPS by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > what the parent meant about China going to MIPS

      China has a 'Dragon' or something processor about to launch to run GNU/Linux, and it is MIPS.

      > MIPS cores rarely end up in high end

      Today's high end is embedded five years hence.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  173. benchmarker was quoted as saying: by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "This bitch is so fast, I'm getting younger just standing next to it."

    when asked to clarify, he responded
    "I want my mommy"

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  174. Re:Agur! by goofballs · · Score: 1

    What parts of web development require one process to still be using up your CPU when you've switched to another app? I do web development/programming for a living and I never have more than one program actively doing anything at one time, with the exception of ftp'ing an entire directory in the background.

    so you're doing mostly static pages? more web *design* than development if that's the case. if you're actually coding pages, you can chew up the cpu pretty well.

  175. Re:Agur! by jo_ham · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The render farm aspect of Shake 3 and FCP was very intersting to us - we use a Dual 450 G4 as the primary editing machine (backed up with a 667Mhz Powerbook).

    Handing off renders to multiple machines would be a big benefit to us, even if it's only to make the Powermac and Powerbook work together - three processors has to be better than two in this sort of task.

    If it really works well, for a small outlay it would be pretty easy to put together a little farm of old G4 boxes - dual 450s and 500s to use them purely for the times you hit "render all" in FCP and have 22 layers of video and photoshop files to put together.

    I am continually amazed at the performance we get out of our 'humble' Dual 450 machine in Final Cut Pro. It's a tribute to Apple's hardware and software shops that it's so good. Makes me wonder just how mind blowing FCP is on a G5 box!

  176. Why no Apples to Apples comparison?? by nobodyman · · Score: 1

    Sorry for the pun, but does anyone know where I can find a comparison between the G5 vs the older G4? Apple doesn't have any g4 vs g5 benchmarks My guess is that they don't want people to use inductive reasoning to compare the g4 to the current crop of Pentiums.

  177. BS by donkiemaster · · Score: 1

    i have written multithreaded test for intel cpu's many times using hundreds to thousands of threads and see virtually no performance hit compared to a single thread doing the same computations. IE 2 cpu's speeds it up exactly 2 times. Are they claiming that they speed it up more than 2 times for 2 cpus? that would be a sweet trick, almost quantum computer like in it's ability to know stuff faster than it knows it

  178. Re:Agur! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Medal of Honor is one game dsigned to take advantage of both procs. So there.

  179. Re:Am I the only one... I have one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, troll....

    NewEgg has 2 GHz Opterons (OEM) for $830 each.
    2G of PC3200 memory comes in at around $325.

    For just the processors and the memory, you are looking at $1985.

    No case, no motherboard, no quiet fans and power supply (your machine is no louder than 38dbs, right?), no DVD-R/CDRW burner, no SATA hard drive.

    What are the specs of this magical 2-way Opteron box you speak of?

  180. Why do you need fast CPUs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at my K6-300 here:
    load averages: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 up 3+07:16:20

    I think it cannot go below 0.

  181. Re:OH MAN I'M SO BAKED!!!! by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1

    Whaa? This should have gotten a +1 Funny. Or at least the parent post should have! Again... more clueless moderation from people who have their heads up their ass.

  182. Look at the actual numbers by raph · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you look at the numbers Apple is claiming vs. the latest numbers posted at the SPEC site, then it would appear that the G5 is getting creamed by the Pentium 4 / Xeon.

    First, single CPU performance. Apple claims 840 for SPECfp_base2000, and 800 for SPECint_base2000. A Dell Precision 360 with 3.2GHz P4 and DDR400 memory gives 1267 and 1242, respectively.

    Next, dual-CPU. Apple claims 15.7 for SPECfp_rate_base2000 and 17.2 for SPECint_rate_base2000. A Dell Precision Workstation 650 with dual 3.06 GHz Xeons gives 18.0 and 25.6, respectively.

    Of course, there are lies, damn lies, and benchmarks, but in this case I think it's fair to compare actual SPEC numbers with vendor claims.

    And don't get me wrong, I think Apples are wonderful systems. I recommend them to many of my friends. But for raw CPU power, they lag the Intel powerhouse.

    --

    LILO boot: linux init=/usr/bin/emacs

  183. Yes, but... by Zathras11 · · Score: 1

    I would still have to sell my house to buy one
    (while I'd only have to sell my car to buy the
    PC). Okay, so I have a crappy house, and a
    crappy car, still... :^)

    It boggles my mind why Apple insists on pricing
    their equipment as they do. I STILL own an
    Apple II+, IIe, IIc and IIgs, so I am NOT
    anti-Apple. But I also own a business, and
    I know that you increase sales, and profit, by
    lowering price and CAPTURING MORE OF THE MARKET.
    Why does Apple not know this simply truth?
    What good does it do to be perpetually at 10%
    of the computer market? Running ads saying how
    easy it is to adjust to a switch in computer
    formats is wonderful, but try reducing your
    prices, which will increase your customer base
    when more people can AFFORD to make the switch!

    Regarding the story of origin, the performance
    (G5 vs. Xeon) sounds great.

    1. Re:Yes, but... by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      It boggles my mind why Apple insists on pricing their equipment as they do. I STILL own an Apple II+, IIe, IIc and IIgs, so I am NOT anti-Apple. But I also own a business, and I know that you increase sales, and profit, by lowering price and CAPTURING MORE OF THE MARKET.

      It boils down to a simple choice - do you want to have 3% of the market and 300% profit margins or have 20% of the market and 10% profit margins. The former quite often turns out to be a better bussiness model. If you manufacture a roadster or SUV, you don't really need to capture the market share of ford escort.

  184. Great news! But how is it for.... by BurKaZoiD · · Score: 1

    the results augur well for Apple G5 performance in technical and scientific computing environments and for playing games.

    Awesome! This is just awesome news!! My next big question is: how is it surfing for pr0n???

  185. My two cents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I've been hearing from apple for a while now is "Our processors are the best thing since sliced bread, they will get anything you want done far faster than any other architecture, and will do it cheaper for the same performance"

    So what I want to know is why have I never heard of any REALLY cpu intensive applications being run on G5 cpu's. For example Weta Studios uses intel CPU's for it's render farm for LOTR,

    Where are the really hard applications being run on theise things, where are the Beowolfe clusters?

    Someone must have a least tried it, what were the results?

    -Anon Coward

  186. Re:*Not* locked into a platform by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1
    If I had an Intel/AMD box, I'd be more locked into a platform than with my Mac.

    Not if you have a G5, which can't run VirtualPC.

    In fact, Virtual PC allows me to run multiple x86 operating systems (say, Win '98, Win XP, OpenStep, and QNX) simultaneously with each other, too.

    Of course, there's no guarantee that it will stay that way, as VirtualPC is owned by Microsoft.

    I can run Windows apps on my Mac, but you can't run Mac apps on your PC.

    The Mac applications that I want to run are also available for PC.

    --
    Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
  187. Re:Agur! by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1
    Holy cow, I'm not the only one that does this! Hell I run Photoshop, Golive, BBedit, Itunes, Ichat, Sarfari, Fetch, word excell, and powerpoint on my 700Mhz G3 ibook. Yeah it slows like a bitch, but it all still runs without crashing X.2 ant that's with 640MB of ram installed.

    Actully at work I do have a dual 1.25Ghz G4 with 1 GB of ram and the second processor really helps. Hopefully at the end of the year, as VP of Infromation Tech maybe I will get one of those new G5's after X.3 comes out and my current machine will become humble Intern fodder.

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  188. Does it run Scientific Workplace? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last mac version came out in 1996 (v.2.5). The current version is 4.1 and runs great under Linux/Wine. What about a MacOSX version?

  189. Re:Agur! by junkgrep · · Score: 1

    Gabe Newell talked a bit about MT in Half-Life 2.

    Implementing and maintaining a "deeply" multi-threaded version of Source would be a pain (i.e. multi-threading the renderer). Implementing a hacky version (e.g. having a discreet physics thread or running the client and server in different threads) is something we may do depending upon how much bandwidth we have before we ship. Right now we don't get nearly as much bang for the buck working on hyperthreading as we do on other optimizations. That may change as we run out of things to optimize.

    64-bits, in contrast, is a one-time cost and is fairly simple to take advantage of. It's a huge win for tools as it not only gets more work done per instruction, but it also gets us past the current memory limitations, which are a problem for us today on tools.

    Distributed computing is harder than hyperthreading but it has the potential to increase performance by a huge amount (8X on our tools) as opposed to hyperthreading (30%). All of our tools are going to a distributed approach.

    So the taxonomy looks like this:
    - general algorithmic optimization (general good thing to do)
    - DX9 optimization (big gains, long term direction)
    - 64-bits (not that hard, solves memory problem as well as performance gains)
    - hyperthreading (hard initial cost, on-going code maintainence cost, limited unpredictable performance gains, benefits in multiprocessor environments as well)
    - distributed computing (hardest to do, biggest potential gains, great for tools, may be great for servers, not sure how it works with clients)

  190. Re:Agur! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um... Quake 3 came out on mac first...

    Um... Bullshit.

  191. You are a moron by Llywelyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Simply put.

    Please, be my guest and spec out a (comparable!) dual-opteron or a dual-Xenon system with AGP 8x Pro, 1 GHz FSB, 3 PCI-X slots, FireWire, USB, Optical Audio, SATA, DDR400 (8 slots, 2 GB DIMM support), ATI Radeon 9600 Pro, a 56k modem, AirPort Antenna, Bluetooth, a spacious aluminum case, quality power unit, and a CD-RW/DVD-R system for $3000. Don't forget the operating system as well (sure, you can compile Linux from the ground up for it, but I consider my time to be valuable).

    That is what you get if you buy a mac for $3000.

    If you aren't willing to spend $3000 on a computer, you aren't going to get the highest-end mac that you can buy. Period. Yet that is what you seem to be specifying.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  192. Auger was a French physicist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think he got the Nobel Prize for the Auger effect but I am not sure.

  193. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  194. -1 The Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha, apple zealot mods r teh ghey again!

    You should know that these people are far too ghey to handle the truth, they only want the spoon fed fiction that jobs shoves in their ass every night.

    They believe what they want, I will pity their ignorance and hope they die quickly and quietly.

  195. G5 all well and good but... by visgoth · · Score: 0, Troll

    I have a sneaking suspicion for the price of a fully tricked out dual G5 mac I could build a very nice dual Opteron rig that would squash it. Not to mention I would have my choice of os to run on it, winxp 64, linux, bsd etc.

    --
    My patience is infinite, my time is not.
    1. Re:G5 all well and good but... by metalligoth · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, you couldn't squash it, except maybe if your PC came with a FireWire Bulldozer. First, RTFA. Do you see those benchmarks? Second, not only do you get your choice of OS on a G5 (OS X, Linux, etc.) you can also run Office natively, write programs natively that compile to X86, but you can also run X11 applications side by side with Mac OS apps, all on a system running with a BSD Core. The fact that you said, "my choice of OS" cracks me up. Do you even realize that OS X is based on BSD and is open source at the core? Need your precious Windows? Ever heard of Virtual PC? (Which will be compiled for the G5 soon according to Microsoft and Apple.)

      I don't know about you, but I'm a goth. Part of that, to me, means I think for myself. In this case, it means no Intel, and no AMD. IMHO, PowerPC and *NIX are the future.

    2. Re:G5 all well and good but... by MagicBox · · Score: 1

      http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/08/27/ 158214&mode=thread&tid=179&tid=185&tid=190&tid=201 So far MS doesn't seem to want to make VirtualPC available to Mac users. Anyway I think you missed the point the previous poster was making.

      --

      The phaomnneil pweor of the hmuan mnid. Fcuknig amzanig eh!
    3. Re:G5 all well and good but... by metalligoth · · Score: 1

      No, Microsoft doesn't want people on the Mac to use Virtual PC to emulate non-MS x86 operating systems. When Virtual PC was owned by Connectix, there was a Red Hat and IBM PC-DOS version of VPC. Now there isn't. That's the game they're playing. The point the previous poster was making was that there is no OS choice on PowerPC, which is untrue. They also were saying that you don't get bang for your buck on hardware, also very untrue. Is there some other point I missed?

  196. Re:Agur! by Blondie-Wan · · Score: 4, Informative
    Um... Quake 3 came out on mac first...

    Um... Bullshit.

    Um... actually, the Quake III test did come out first on the Mac, back in April of '99, then on Linux and Windows. id wanted the initial release of the test version to be on the platform with the fewest/most controlled variations in configurations. Windows users got to try the test a couple weeks after Mac users did.

  197. What's the point of faster or slower? by dr.badass · · Score: 1

    I don't really understand why there's such a big stink over whether the G5 (in general or specific models) is faster or slower than PCs (in general or specific models). Even if it's 5% slower on some benchmark, it's still pretty fucking fast.

    I haven't seen anyone disagree with that much, and yet lots of people are demanding that Apple (and only Apple) back up their marketing.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  198. Forget all that stuff... by fm6 · · Score: 1

    Answer a really important question: does Drop Bear Repellent actually work, or is it just a scam?

    1. Re:Forget all that stuff... by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Scam! I think it actually attracts them! Stay away from that stuff! ;D

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
  199. As I sit here typing on an Opteron by charnov · · Score: 1

    As I sit here typing on my $1800 dual Opteron running a 64 bit OS (United Linux), I can't help wonder that this shouldn't have been available on the market TWO MONTHS AGO when I bout it...hmmm.

    --
    [RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
  200. Sure, I'll fan this flame :-) by sootman · · Score: 1, Redundant

    >The Mac is easier to use.

    Arguable. Mostly depends on what you're used to. I've been around plenty of noobs with their shiny new boxes. I've seen people take to Windows with no problem, and I've seen people trip up over Mac OS X. Could go either way. The other question is what do your friends, who will (hopefully) guide you through your dark days, use?

    >Now it's also as fast (or significantly FASTER) the the PC.

    For the sake of argument, let's just say that both are equally well suited for common consumer tasks: web browsing, digital cameras, email, burning CDs, average 3D games. Stay away from fancy stuff for a second--no firewire 800, no DVD burning, etc. Still with me? OK, good.

    >It runs all the commercial apps you need.

    Unless you want games, or cheap clip art, or scores of other things. Most people do *not* buy MS Office for their home computers--the use MS Works or AppleWorks or whatever comes with them. Most also steer towards cheap photo editors (more than jusr rotate & enhance that iPhoto offers) like PSP or the cheap Adobe products, rather than Quark-Photoshop-Illustrator stuff.

    >It can emulate proprietary in-house apps with VirtualPC.

    For only $300 more (Win XP version). Yes, you can put your pirated copy of Win98 on if you buy the $120 DOS-only version, but how many noobs know to do that?

    >It can play all the latest games, even if they laga couple months (get a PS2, also!).

    So after you've bought your expensive (see below) Mac, you recommend a $150 console too?

    >It's UNIX under the hood and runs X11 for added compatability.

    True. But what do noobs want UNIX for? Without a nearby geek, they don't. Period.

    >All of this, and it's not any more expensive than comparable PC hardware.

    store.apple.com: base 1.6 GHz G5, $2000. (no monitor.) 1.4 GHz G4s, get'em while you can, $1300. Base 800 MHz eMac, $800.

    dell.com/tv: 2.4 GHz P4, 17" monitor, sometimes a free upgrade to a 15" LCD: $500.

    PCs will continue to dominate (what is it, 20:1?) due to economics alone. Will they cost more in the long run due to viruses and whatnot? Who knows. Will the user have a more pleasurable experience with one or the other? Who knows. Is it better to spend $500 today than $800 today? Yes--*everyone* knows that one.

    Not saying Macs aren't great (I'm sure the last few major viruses changed some minds), just saying what reality is. Also, I'm not saying Apple is going under. Far from it--they've got high-margin hardware (plus iPods and iTMS and whatnot) that sells just fine, thakyouverymuch. The BMW/Ford analogy explains it all.

    PS--FYI, I work (two jobs, no less) as a (primarily) Mac tech and own both Macs and PCs.

    PPS--the Red v. Blue page was a joke, a parody, that made use of exaggeration. Just so you know. :-)

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    1. Re:Sure, I'll fan this flame :-) by Cerebus · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Is it better to spend $500 today than $800 today? Yes--*everyone* knows that one.

      Not always. If the $500 I spend today lasts for one year, but the $800 I could have spent would have lasted two, it's better to spend the $800.

      My Dell is a about 18 months old and I'm considering a replacement; the sum total of upgrades I'd have to buy to keep it going make it attractive to just replace the box. My year-old iMac is going strong, and the late-2000 Cube is still playing all the games I've bought recently.

      YMMV of course, but the numbers I've seen for businesses (which jibe with my personal experience) show that Apples stay in service more than twice as long, with fewer service calls. There's more to consider when calculating cost than just the sticker price.

      --
      -- Cerebus
  201. Re:g5 problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DP-2GHz G5's aren't shipping yet buddy. Obvoiusly another wintel fool trying to make a apocryphal point.
    Plus, unless you had about 2MB RAM. There's no way BBEdit Lite would strain.


    faster, cheaper, more stable systems
    Are you insinuating that windows is more stable than OS X? If so, you're not even worth listening to. As for faster, cheaper Cheaper maybe, but you get what you pay for. The G5 Ownzors your pentium.

  202. Re:Agur! by sootman · · Score: 1

    I use the old dead freeware gadget "Cycles" to watch both G4s in separate graphs, it's interesting seeing each processor's load.

    There's also /Applications/Utilities/CPU Monitor. :-) I recommend "extended view". Green = user, red = system, blue = niced. Close the main window, open the prefs, and tell it to use Extended view in the app's dock icon. Then go to system prefs and drop it into the login items folder, and tell it "hide" so it isn't the active app when you log in.

    Course, that's all OS X. Not sure if you're using it or not.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  203. Lies, damn lies, and benchmarks by sootman · · Score: 1

    >It is ***a*** [emphasis added] complicated photoshop benchmark.

    Well, if you're going to do that exact task (rotate 90 degrees, then 9, then 0.9?!?!?*), the G5 is obviously the way to go. Now read this little nugget from barefeats.com, a great pro-Mac site that pits Macs against PCs but is honest enough to admit when Macs fall short:

    "I tested a 1.3GHz Centrino laptop (12" screen) recently. At first I was going to compare it to the 12" PowerBook. But it ran CineBench 2003 100% faster than the PowerBook G4/1GHz (17" screen). It ran Photoshop 20% faster. It ran Quake3 103% faster in 640x480 "Fastest" mode. The 17" PowerBook did, however, run Quake3 84% faster in 1024x768 "Max" mode. Probably has more video memory."

    The point is, any CPU can beat any other CPU at certain tasks. Depends on what you're measuring. I once tested (years ago) an AMD K6/2-450 against a dual-PPro. Thanks to more MHz and a faster system bus, the AMD edged out the PPros in most tasks by a consistant 10-20%. But the PPro *spanked* the AMD (I mean, by 3:1 or 4:1) on some tests. Whatever the strength was--FPU, integer, whatever--there were some things it was *great* at. If I would have published just those results, would you have bought one?

    * I bet my old dual-PPro would win if I rotated the image 99.9 degrees in one step. 90 & 9 took 3.5 seconds for the Mac. :-)

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  204. Re:Agur! by sakusha · · Score: 1

    I use Cycles because I think it's aesthetics are better than the Apple CPU Monitor. Just a personal thing.

  205. MOD UP! This is why the benchmark is useless! by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 1
    Funny thing - we were just discussing this very thing in my comp architecture class. Apple specified this benchmark to be "compiler independent", hence the use of GCC on both platforms.

    What they convienently left out is the fact that Apple has been steadily coding improvements for the PowerPC flavor of GCC, leaving x86 GCC in the dust speed-wise. X86 GCC does not have the same kind of corporate sponsorship. Even so, this "benchmark", compared to the same code compiled with Intel's compiler, eats Intel's dust.

    You hit the nail on the head.

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

  206. Who freakin' cares? by inkswamp · · Score: 1
    I'm not trolling. I'm serious. Who really gives a rip about all this?

    Yes, it's very observant at this point to notice yet again that this kind of thing is primarily a marketing move... yadda yadda... but what does it matter? The reason I stick with my Mac is that, even at half the speed of a PC, I'm more productive than with Windows. It's mostly because of the care and thought that goes into the interface and the way you can interact with the machine. There's a lot to that. For example, my boss (a PC user) is constantly blown away by the consistent implementation of drag-and-drop on the Mac desktop, along with the concept of text clippings. From what I've seen Windows is still struggling to catch up with where the Mac was way back in System 7.

    That's one example, but it's simple, well thought out stuff like that that keeps me on a Mac. I'm not interested in the whole Computing Speed Circle Jerk and I wonder why it matters so much that people get into these divisive arguments about the validity of SPEC numbers and all. Who cares?

    --
    --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    1. Re:Who freakin' cares? by ErnstKompressor · · Score: 1

      The job-free, college-dorm, PC Gamers of course :)

      When you have to ask your parents to buy you a computer, of course you need to dupe them into buying you a dual-xeon/P4/Opteron/with a 256 MB NVidia graphics card 'so you can do your homework (wink, wink)'

      I know how hard it can be to actually write a term paper, or do some lab reports, or research on the web with only a lowly dual-gig G4. Sure it can play Quake 3 or UT, but can it play the next 'big game'?...er...I mean can I do my homework on it?(I think my mommy is starting to read /.)

      --
      We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
  207. Re:*Not* locked into a platform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, as is well know, Virtual PC doesn't run on a G5 box.

  208. For the love of Jebus H. Cripes, mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And just how much does a Dell with dual P4s, a 23" LCD, SATA, PCI-X, Firewire 800, Superdrive, etc. cost?

    Priceless.

    (hint: there's no such thing as a dual P4!)

    Who modded this down? It should be a +5 Funny!

  209. This article is a joke.. by myrdred · · Score: 1

    Near the end, the article links to one of their previous articles on the G5, and mentions that interestingly their earlier article had slightly different SPEC results for the G5. The funny thing is, that article talks about the MOTOROLA G5, ie the PowerPC 8500, not the IBM PowerPC 970! Yeah, they were both referred to as the G5, they must be the same chip.

  210. MOD PARENT SIDEWAYS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whatchu talkin' about, Willis? Even this post, with its sly play on modding "up" or "down," is funnier than your imitation of a two-faced donut-eatin' po-lice!

  211. hmmm... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

    First off, this is SO FREAKING OLD it's not even funny. Secondly, does it matter now that the Opterons are whomping ass against Xeons in multiproc configs?

    --
    It's been a long time.
  212. Another misguided soul destined for correction... by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Interesting

    >>The Mac is easier to use.
    >
    >Arguable. Mostly depends on what you're used to. I've
    >been around plenty of noobs with their shiny new boxes.
    >I've seen people take to Windows with no problem, and
    >I've seen people trip up over Mac OS X.

    But - easier to use for advanced users? I'd have to give that to a Mac. I could care less what is easier to learn... Or, if not easier to use, how about less frustrating.

    >Could go either way. The other question is what do your
    >friends, who will (hopefully) guide you through your
    >dark days, use?

    Counterpoint - 10 people come up to me and say "my computer keeps rebooting...". I just shrung and say "Sorry mac, I have an Apple". Sometimes it's good to be alone. :-)

    >>Now it's also as fast (or significantly FASTER) the the PC.
    >For the sake of argument, let's just say that both are
    >equally well suited for common consumer tasks: web
    >browsing, digital cameras, email, burning CDs, average
    >3D games. Stay away from fancy stuff for a second--no
    >firewire 800, no DVD burning, etc. Still with me? OK,
    >good.

    Lost me at the first one. Web browsing? Safari at least lets you block popups. I don't know how many people I've directed to the google toolbar - after I've pointed them to AdAware because they have a large number of very suspicious popups (hey look, the company intranet just added popunders! don't think so...). Oddly, I have yet to need AdAware or the like on my Powerbook.

    Email? I get bayesian filtering out of the box. If .Mac were still free it would really be no contest.

    Burning CD's? PC's (even modern ones) still seem a bit more fragile in that regard.

    Digital camera support might be about equal... but what about digital video? I hate hate hate trying to edit video on a PC. I will never do it again, and I will do everything in my power to save others from doing so as well.

    Only a PC user considers burning a DVD "fancy". I consider it nessicary for backups and great for pictures too (for large slideshows). That kind of thing should be basic sttuff for all computers by now, all the parts are there.

    You do have a point at games.

    >>It runs all the commercial apps you need.
    >
    >Unless you want games, or cheap clip art, or scores of >other things. Most people do *not* buy MS Office for their
    >home computers--the use MS Works or AppleWorks or
    >whatever comes with them. Most also steer towards
    >cheap photo editors (more than jusr rotate & enhance
    > that iPhoto offers) like PSP or the cheap Adobe products, >rather than Quark-Photoshop-Illustrator stuff.

    So what's wrong with Appleworks for what most people really do? Why can't I use any of the thousands of cheap clip-art or font CD's? I can... If they need office to read work files, they will just buy (or pirate) Office X. End of story. Windows makes it a little easier to pirate Office if it was not bundled. I can access my corperate intranet just fine from the mac with Citrix and RDC clients for OS X.

    And as for Photoshop, you have Elements on both platforms. And the Mac also has GraphicConverter, a really good program for very little money. It even works with 16-bit Tiff's which Elements does not accept... I'm not sure what you were getting at there. Again, games are really the only thing where you have a significantly better library of software.

    >It can play all the latest games, even if they laga couple months (get a PS2, also!).

    >So after you've bought your expensive (see below) Mac,
    > you recommend a $150 console too?

    How many PC owners have an XBox? What's up with that? You need as console anyway if you are really into games. Personally I bought a PS2 some time before my Mac because I was tired of the PC merry-go-round of upgrades and driver failures.

    >>It's UNIX u

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  213. Re:Agur! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same here, well that and the fact the Cycles is also lower CPU use.

  214. g4 specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.jc-news.com/parse.cgi?pc/benchmarking/x plat/ppc-x86

  215. Re:Am I the only one... I have one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares? An Opteron may not run OS X, but it will run...

    CPM
    MS/PC/DR/Real32 DOS
    Win 9x/ME
    Win NT/2K/XP
    Redhat/Mandrake/Debian/SuSE/Slackware Linux
    Free/Open/Net BSD
    Solaris
    QNX
    AtheOS
    BeOS

    And those will run literally thousands (if not millions) of more applications than OS X will. I may not use all of those operating systems or applications, but those choices will remain open should I ever want to.

  216. Re:Agur! by sakusha · · Score: 1

    Well, I should note that the QMaster render clients run on Linux and Irix (windoze client is discontinued) but those are paid licensed versions and Apple's giving away the QMaster Mac version free. They're giving an incentive to run Apple hardware across the board, obviously.
    It's easier to create a cluster computing gadget like QMaster if you've got a few apps that operate around a common task like FCP/Shake rendering, and Apple has barely begun to develop this so it's still a little rough around the edges and geeky. But I don't see any reason why this clustering couldn't be applied to general apps. I figure eventually you'll have a dual proc system handling local OS tasks and I/O, plus any number of extra "virtual processors" available through a cluster.

  217. Digdug had an auger too by 86753ohnine! · · Score: 1

    Digdug had an auger, I'm pretty sure anyway...

  218. Apple G5 system without an operating system? by The+Revolutionary · · Score: 1

    Anticipating a Debian or Gentoo distribution for this architecture, I'm curious whether it is possible to purchase one of these systems from Apple without OS X installed; the "Apple tax", so to speak.

    I know that Slashdot readers have in the past made some noise about Microsoft's practices in this area, specifically concerning laptops.

    Have any Slashdot readers have researched this at all, that is, how one might obtain such a system from Apple, and if so, what they have turned up?

  219. He didn't mention the clock speed by r6144 · · Score: 1
    Why do you think that he is buying the top-of-the-line model of Opteron? Since he seems to be saving money, he must be going for the ones with a slightly lower clock speed, which costs a LOT less.

    Also remember that the performance of 2GHz G5s and 2GHz (or any other version) Opterons are not readily comparable.

  220. Yellow Dog. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Yellow Dog Linux sells Macs pre-installed with Linux. Dunno if they have G5s yet. They also sell G4 based small-footprint machines called "briQs".

  221. Inductive reasoning? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Is that where you take charge and plug yourself into current events?

  222. Re:*Not* locked into a platform by ErnstKompressor · · Score: 1

    I'm confused...

    "If I had an Intel/AMD box, I'd be more locked into a platform than with my Mac.

    --Not if you have a G5, which can't run VirtualPC. "

    >>yet

    "In fact, Virtual PC allows me to run multiple x86 operating systems (say, Win '98, Win XP, OpenStep, and QNX) simultaneously with each other, too.

    Of course, there's no guarantee that it will stay that way, as VirtualPC is owned by Microsoft. "

    >> I see you have the magic 8-ball

    "I can run Windows apps on my Mac, but you can't run Mac apps on your PC.

    The Mac applications that I want to run are also available for PC."

    >>And vice-versa...I don't see your point...Are you a fan of MS(totally acceptable, BTW)? And in that case, is your beef with Apple based purely on price points rather than it's 'propreitary-ness'.

    I am loathe to make a car comparison yet again, however I never hear people complaining about how an expensive car is a bad choice seeing as we all are supposed to obey the speed limit. Sure we can all drive Kias, but we don't all want to. Why does extra money spent on a computer have to be taken out of context as more than choosing a car with leather and a Navigation system. I don't see how MS is any less propreitary than Apple. I think you are really just a PC gamer(Totally acceptable, BTW) who like many of your brethren are perpetually unable to differentiate computer use as a tool and computer use as a toy.

    --
    We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
  223. Re:Right click, amoung other things by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Wow you people are pathetic. Take your god damned USB tow button mouse off your current computer and plung the fucking thing into your mac. Instant right click.

    As for math and the real world, technicaly speaking all of your "real work" is done with merely addition and multiplication, it's just a matter of how fast each item can be accomplished.

    Its kind of interesting, actually, because where I work there are a lot of windows advocates and a lot of Linux advocates (myself included). The one thing we can all agree on is that Apple blows

    Mob mentality sucks doesn't it?

    The laptops look like barbie's makeup kit, not to mention the price

    Which ones? They grey ones? Or the white ones?

    At least MS lets OEMs sell hardware that can run their OS

    Repeat after me, Apple sells computers, microsoft sells hardware

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  224. spelling corrections by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    must remember to use preview:

    tow = two

    and microsoft sells software, not hardware.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  225. Defending your parent by Nazmun · · Score: 1

    Um... if your a skilled pc builder then $800 is easy to build for a quality system. This involves knowing which things like which processor you can buy that can be overclocked big time. Their are still some sub $100 dollar amd processors then can be overclocked over 50% and perform better then their $300 dollar counterparts while producing less heat then the newest p4's.

    Also most mac components tend to be cheap... Did you know that the ati radeon 9600 pro is slower then the ati radeon 9500 pro? In fact you can overclock a ati radeon 9500 np to run faster then both. So if you take extreme hardware knowledge into mind you can easily build a quality system for $1200. Also Prove to me that you can run the apple system at ddr400 with eight memory slots... Most motherboards have a hard time running at that spec after filling 3 slots.

    I can keep on giving examples but i'm tired.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
    1. Re:Defending your parent by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      "Um... if your a skilled pc builder then $800 is easy to build for a quality system"

      Oh, I agree, you can build a "quality system" for $800, but not one that will compete with a dual 2 GHz G5, which is what the poster I was criticizing was specifying. Be my guest, talk about building an $800 system, but don't think that it is

      As to overclocking: no thank you! I am good inside of a case and with electronics (I've even cut my share of PCBs), but I *like* having an intact warranty on all of my components.

      " Also Prove to me that you can run the apple system at ddr400 with eight memory slots... Most motherboards have a hard time running at that spec after filling 3 slots."

      Here is a better challenge. Tell me why you think it would have any difficulty doing so. This motherboard is designed explicitly for 8 RAM slots to be filled two at a time. There is nothing in the technical specs which would indicate why there would be a problem and no reports have come in yet indicating difficulties.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  226. Re:Agur! by sootman · · Score: 1

    Good to know. I'll check it out. Nuttin' wrong wit' pretty. :-)

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  227. Re:Another misguided soul destined for correction. by sootman · · Score: 1

    >>>The Mac is easier to use.
    >>Arguable. Mostly depends on what you're used to. I've...
    >But - easier to use for advanced users?...
    For me, actually, yes--the PC is still miles ahead of Mac when it comes to keyboard shortcuts, especially at the OS level. I like the fact that I have control-F to find things in any app but can always, instantly, get an OS-find with Windows-F, compared to the Mac where you have to click the desktop, then command-F. And so on, and so on. Nothing more than personal preference. To each his own. If you like OS X more, you won't hear an argument from me.

    >Could go either way. The other question is what do your
    >friends, who will (hopefully) guide you through your
    >dark days, use?
    >Counterpoint - 10 people come up to me and say "my
    > computer keeps rebooting...". I just shrung and say
    >"Sorry mac, I have an Apple". Sometimes it's good to be
    > alone. :-)

    On our side, true. But new users will go with the majority to avoid people like you. :-)

    You next points were all good and I have little argument with any. My main point is that most people (and many companies) look at two things: "what is cheapest today?" and "what are most people using?" They don't see past the end of their nose and don't know what they're missing (fewer viruses, better built-in mail client*, etc.) by not going the Mac route.

    * good point about Mail.app. I didn't think of that since I have never, ever a) used LookOut or b) used a Mac for email. Eudora 1.5.4, ca. 1996, not a virus yet. :-)

    >Peace of mind and lack of spyware - priceless.
    LOL.

    >Only the PC is the gift that keeps on taking, as it were.
    Good line.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  228. Re:*Not* locked into a platform by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1
    yet

    The point is, you can't run it now on a G5. Microsoft dropped the ball on this one. Why is there no patch for the existing product? What is their timeframe for the new product?

    I see you have the magic 8-ball

    LOL! Neither do you.

    And vice-versa...I don't see your point...Are you a fan of MS(totally acceptable, BTW)?

    No, I have no love of Microsoft, which is why I won't buy VirtualPC.

    And in that case, is your beef with Apple based

    Where did you get the idea I had a beef with Apple? I don't have a beef with Apple.

    I have owned several Apple products in the past. I had one of the first Mac Centris 610's to be sold. My parents owned a "Woz" machine - one of the original Apple IIgs machines signed by Steve Wozniak (which was really l337 at the time - 1986). Some of the products that I still keep are my Apple II+ and Newton 2100. I would consider purchasing more Apple products in the future, and I have on several occasions.

    purely on price points rather than it's 'propreitary-ness'.

    If you're asking about why I have not purchased an Apple product recently, no, it was not primarily price related. It had to do with features. Examples:

    • More than quite a few years ago, I purchased a Power Computing machine (they made Apple clones), not because it was cheaper, but because it fscking kicked ASS! It had a bigger hard drive than Apple offered, more memory, a better video digitizer, a faster CDROM (a big deal at the time), and an integrated ZIP drive (FREE, because I went to MacWorld).
    • The last time I bought a laptop, I considered buying the PowerBook G4. I didn't purchase it, because after using a laptop with 1400x1050 for a few years, I needed more screen real estate than the 1280x854 Apple was willing to sell me. The Apple just happened to be more expensive than the PC I did buy with the same features (and a bigger screen 1600x1200).
    • I was also thinking about purchasing an iPod. I instead ended up purchasing an Archos, primarily because I don't need to use external software to add music to the Archos, the Archos can record music, and the Archos displays my pictures. It just so happened that the Archos was also less expensive than the iPod.
    So basically, the price didn't make much difference, because the features weren't as good.

    I am loathe to make a car comparison yet again, however I never hear people complaining about how an expensive car is a bad choice seeing as we all are supposed to obey the speed limit.

    I won't make that comparision either. However, I will offer the suggestion that an expensive car would be a bad choice when that car is both more expensive and offers less features, which was my experience recently with Apple products (although not in the past). It's also the reason why several years ago, I bought a Mazda instead of a Volkswagon. Now I have a VW instead of a Mazda, because VW changed their feature set to something more useful.

    Sure we can all drive Kias, but we don't all want to. Why does extra money spent on a computer have to be taken out of context as more than choosing a car with leather and a Navigation system.

    Because the computer simply doesn't offer as many features, especially the ones that I need.

    I don't see how MS is any less propreitary than Apple.

    Because, even if you strip all the software off an Apple, the firmware and hardware architecture are still proprietary. In fact, for a long time, you couldn't remove MacOS from a Mac if you wanted to run a different OS, because the way the firmware was written, only MacOS could be booted (I don't know if it's still this way or not). On a PC, the firmware and hardware are open and many different vendors make them. There is no issue with booting an OS that isn't Windows, because of this.

    I think you are really just a PC gamer(Totally acceptable, BTW) who like many of your brethren are perpetually unable to differentiate computer use as a tool and computer use as a toy.

    Actually, no, I'm just a guy that uses PCs to do programming work, pay my taxes, write e-mail, browse the web, etc. I do play the occasional game, but I do that on a console. Last game I bought for PC was UT several years ago.

    --
    Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
  229. Warranty... Plus incorrect on the mobo by Nazmun · · Score: 1

    Now how would overclocking void any warranties? In any case even if some company doesn't allow overclocking how would they find out. I looked at the specs at the apple site and the dual g5 only supports 4 slots. That makes more sense for a desktop cpu.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
  230. Literacy is a Good Thing(TM) by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

    >Now how would overclocking void any warranties?

    Tell you what, call ATI up and ask them.

    " I looked at the specs at the apple site and the dual g5 only supports 4 slots. That makes more sense for a desktop cpu."

    No, the 1.6 GHz only supports 4 slots.

    " The dual processor system has eight DIMM slots...:"

    http://www.apple.com/powermac/architecture.html

    Look under heading 5.

    "The dual processor system can hold
    up to eight DIMMs for up to 8GB of memory."

    The latter comes from the technical overview.

    "
    Eight DIMM slots supporting up to 8GB of main memory"

    From the techsheet:

    http://www.apple.com/powermac/printversion.html

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  231. Oh, the persecution! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 0

    Whatever shall I do???

    Yours humbly,
    Ta bu shi da yu

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  232. The firmware isopen? by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    On a PC, the firmware and hardware are open

    Funny you should claim that. Apple uses OpenFirmware. x86 PCs don't.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    1. Re:The firmware isopen? by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1
      Funny you should claim that. Apple uses OpenFirmware. x86 PCs don't.

      You're right that PCs don't use OpenFirmware. However, PCs use the following industry standards:
      BIOS Boot Specification
      System Management BIOS Reference Specification

      Furthermore, not all Macintosh use OpenFirmware. So if you have an old PowerPC machine that you want to put Linux on, you'd better check to see if you need to keep MacOS on it before you start formatting. You don't have this issue with PCs.

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
  233. Mac - not a bad platform for games by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Even if he is a gamer, he should not rule out the Mac. See http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=75595&cid=6763 125.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.