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PC Mag Compares G5 to Xeon

zpok writes "PC Magazine did a comparison between a dual 2.0-GHz Power Mac G5 and an equally expensive Dell Precision 650 Workstation running dual 3.06-GHz Xeon processors. Their conclusion: 'we see that indeed the G5 is generally as fast as the best Intel-based workstations currently available.' But of course 'our cousin Ned can build you a better'un at half the dough.'"

196 comments

  1. objectivity by madbeaner · · Score: 5, Informative

    according to PCMAG, the G5 cost $4349 as tested. Using the apple store, i can get that with the 2x1gb RAM modules, superdrive, no bluetooth/wifi, Radeon 9800, and a modem. now, let's configure a similar Dell Precision 650. the review doesn't mention that the Dell has a Radeon VE 32mb, no 56k modem, a 120gb ATA HD (compared with the G5 and its 160gb SATA), and uses DDR266 (compared to the G5 using DDR400, but that can't be blamed on Dell, but the mobo config). According to PCMAG, they were "comparing the results with a similarly configured (and priced) Dell Precision 650 Workstation". Funny how they give the exact price of the G5 and not of the "similarly priced" Dell.

    as you can see, the Dell is $835 more. now, let's try and be objective, something PCMAG disavowed in their introduction saying they took Apple's claims about the speed of the G5 "with a grain of salt". in other words, the test was designed to debunk Apple, thus throwing objectivity out the window.

    IF we were to buy the RAM by a third party, drop the 56k modem on the G5, and leave the default video card (which is still better than the Dell), the system would cost $3188 (RAM is DDR400, 512mb+1gb on pricewatch). The Dell would cost $4057 (again, with RAM from pricewatch). That would make it $869 more.

    On top of that, PCMAG admits to not taking into account a certain loading time (for controls ... they don't explain what it is, but they make it obvious that said delay is not experienced on the Mac). According to the story, "on the Windows system, loading the controls often took a minute or more. If these times are added back to the actual test times, both Macintosh computers would have clearly outperformed the Windows-based computer." They don't make a note of it on the actual benchmarks, just the preface.

    so if anything should be taken with a grain of salt, it's PCMAG.

    1. Re:objectivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Don't neglect the fact that the Dell 650 uses more expensive ECC memory, for increased reliability. Is any Apple product even capable of using ECC memory?

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

      I went to Dell's site and configured the Precision 650 and the costs really were about the same. The config: dual Xeons at 3.06GHz, 2GB DDR266 with ECC, plus a modem, nVidia Quadro FX 500 (better for this type of computer, right?), DVDRW+CDRW, 40GB+120GB hard drives (ATA/100). This comes out to $4353 which is similarly config'd and similarly priced, is it not?

    3. Re:objectivity by madbeaner · · Score: 5, Informative

      you're right, the G5 doesn't support ECC (check the Virginia Tech Supercomputer threads for those complaints ...) and no, IF you buy the RAM from Apple, the price skyrockets and the Dell and Apple are pretty much evenly priced, but honestly, who the hell would pay those prices? Also, you're probably configuring the Dell for 4x512mb sticks when the G5 config uses 2x1gb, and again the Dell is more expensive. really though, scratch that and leave the default RAM in and just add aftermarket prices, and you'll see the Dell is still much more expensive (i know i sound like a broken record right about now)

    4. Re:objectivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you PC retards won't stop at anything to try to show your overpriced, under-performing hardware is "superior", huh?

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

      Wow, you Mac and PC retards won't stop at anything to try to show your overpriced, under-performing hardware is "superior", huh?

      Its all about the sparC baby!

    6. Re:objectivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      When is the last time you had something crash due to a random bit error in your RAM? Be honest. Odds are about 10,000:1 that the answer is 1990-something....

    7. Re:objectivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe so, but I'd rather take a shot in the mouth for Steve, than take a shot in the ass for Gates.

      Having a 466MHz Power Mac G4 and a 1GHz AMD box, both with similar everything else, I still use the mac more. Why? Well, theres the whold software integration arguement. There's also the "Windows has a half life" arguement. And, there's viri. My PC, it fears the internet. my mac, not a virus, ever. let me say that again. EVER. But thats me.

    8. Re:objectivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The G5 has eight DIMM slots, where the Dell only has 4. So, to fill each systems half way with 2 GB, you can use 4x512MB on the G5, and you have to use 2x1GB on the Dell. And if you want to compare the systems with 8 GB of RAM on each? Hmm.....

    9. Re:objectivity by babbage · · Score: 1
      as you can see, the Dell is $835 more. now, let's try and be objective, something PCMAG disavowed in their introduction saying they took Apple's claims about the speed of the G5 "with a grain of salt". in other words, the test was designed to debunk Apple, thus throwing objectivity out the window.

      Nah, cut them a little slack on this one: it's perfectly valid to take a position as your null hypothesis -- in this case, that Macs are always slower than PCs -- and them come up with a suite of tests that attempt to disprove that hypothesis. By concluding that the G5 is comparable to modern x86 machines, they refuted the null hypothesis and so are standing on perfectly defensible ground here.

      Now if they'd started with a subjective null hypothesis -- "all mac users are neener-heads", or if their tests had done nothing to affirm or contractice their hypothesis, then okay you could blame them for being biased. But in this case that doesn't apply -- they stated their assumptions, then tested them. You could argue that the tests were bogus (all benchmarks are questionable), but at least they were consistent & repeatable.

      I've seen far worse journalism / investigation than this, including from this magazine. The only achingly bad thing that jumped out at me from this article was the assertion that the Mac keyboard & single-button mouse are "bad" -- a purely subjective and easily refutable position (UI research indicates that single-button pointers are more intuitive for novice users; replacement input devices are cheap if it bothers you that much, yadda yadda yadda). Other than that, they seemed to be fairly careful about trying to quantify everything, which IMO absolves them from most accusations of bias.

  2. Objectivity here? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The same criticisms of the Apple propaganda organs that always say that the Macs are faster also applies to the PC propaganda organs saying that PCs are faster.

    Objectivity, wherefor art thou?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Objectivity, wherefor art thou?

      Right here.

      Both the Power Mac and the Dell are decent computers. Neither one is fast in any absolute sense, but both are faster than they need to be for average users. The Dell has more configuration options, but the Mac is far better designed.

      If you are in the market for a desktop computer as fast as these, you won't make your decision based on which one squeaks out the other in some test.

      These sorts of "shoot-outs" are a colossal waste of time and effort.

    2. Re:Objectivity here? by sg3000 · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Objectivity, wherefor art thou?

      Why is objectivity important? What an odd question. Objective measurements of consumer goods makes it easier to understand substitute products and to determine if you're getting a good price for what you bought.

      Oh, you meant, "where are the objective standards?", not "why are there objective standards?" As we all know, "wherefore art thou" isn't a fancy way of saying, "where are you?" It means, "why are you?" or "what purpose are you?"

      I'm just glad the word "whither" has gone out of fashion again. Casual, improper use of Shakespearean English makes fools of us all.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    3. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "wherefore" = "why"

      PLEASE stop using it to mean "where".

    4. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      some objectivity can be found here:

      http://www.spec.org

      note that Apple don't have any results there yet. One should compare SPEC-sanctioned results with SPEC-sanctioned results.

    5. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wherefore means why as therefore means because.

    6. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      Thank you!

      It sounds like he's asking objectivity why it must be!

      News flash kids: The line the dumbass grandparent post is stealing is from Romeo and Juliet.

      Juliet, on her balcony, cries out "Oh, Romeo, Romeo... Wherefore art thou Romeo?"

      What she is asking is "why must you be Romeo [the guy from the family we are having a blood feud with]?" Not "where are you, Romeo?" as so many people who should have failed High School literature seem to think.

    7. Re:Objectivity here? by Golias · · Score: 1
      I'm just glad the word "whither" has gone out of fashion again. Casual, improper use of Shakespearean English makes fools of us all.

      Personally, I like using the Shakespearean "die" when I'm in mixed company. (As in "I would live in your heart, die in your lap, and be buried in your eyes.")

      Since nobody gets it, I'm far less likely to be slapped in the face than if I say what I mean in modern English. :)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    8. Re:Objectivity here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, therefore means "so" not "because."

      Correct: I lost my recent job, therefore I must find another.

      Incorrect: I must find another job therefore I lost my recent one.

      Know what you are talking about before you correct others.

    9. Re:Objectivity here? by El · · Score: 1

      Casual, improper use of Shakespearean English makes fools of us all.
      "Lord, what fools these mortals be!"

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    10. Re:Objectivity here? by gryphokk · · Score: 1

      Oh, to be writ an ass!

      --
      And you, madam, are very ugly. In the morning, I shall be sober.
  3. preach on, good brother, preach on by eskimo232 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many pc morons fail to realize that their single processor P4 they built themselves for under 1k is nowhere near the dual processor G5 in performance. They bring up things like Dell's 350 dollar computer and how much cheaper pc's are, ya they are cheaper but you get what you pay for. for 350 you get every possible corner cut everywhere in that pc and it will most likely require another 500 at least to get it to respectable speeds. When comparing prices/computer, you need to compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges. Shoot the xeon processor, the most comparable to the G5 in terms of performance, is like 800 a chip or some ridiculous price, so start configuring guys, hit up pricewatch and try to make your system 200 bucks cheaper than the g5.........then also try to sell your system for 60% of what you paid for it 2 years later..........and finally try to add in 1 year of no questions asked award winning support..............and tell me what you get.......nothing....because you can't get that on pc's. I just sold my 2 year old 867 Mhz quicksilver for 1,000 on ebay, no monitor included. I paid 1600 for the thing........so i basically rented a mac for 300 a year for 2 years. Get with the program folks, and get a mac.
    I know you hate all the hype and think they are overhyped, etc. Well believe the hype, and then some

    -yet another satisfied mac user

    1. Re:preach on, good brother, preach on by Quikah · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually the Xeon is a pretty crappy chip right now, not really comparable to a G5. The P4 is a much better comparison, but no dual support. Intel is really hurting for a good workstation chip right now, once they bring 800 MHz bus to the Xeon, they will be in better shape but they still are in trouble with the opteron/Athlon64.

      --
      Q.
    2. Re:preach on, good brother, preach on by jdray · · Score: 1
      I tell you what, I would buy a $500 Mac with all the corners trimmed off if only Apple would sell one. Since Apple made the switch to standard, OTS components (USB keyboards, IDE disks, VGA monitors), there's not much reason that they can't (versus won't) compete at the bottom end.

      Give me a 1 GHz G4 with a 40 GB drive, a modest video card and 128 MB of RAM, bundle it with a 15" flat panel monitor, OS X and AppleWorks, price it for $500, and get outta my way. If Dell and Gateway can do it, why can't Apple?

      --
      The Spoon
      Updated 6/28/2011
    3. Re:preach on, good brother, preach on by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      Because there's no money in it!

      Look at the companies you're talking about: Dell, which profits on huge volumes (they control the business world almost exclusively, at least in the US)

      and Gateway, which is broke as hell, trying to desperately to be bought by HP or Dell, and has no focus, no creative drive, basically no reason to exist.

      Apple won't sell a cheap box because they would have to compete in terms of volume with behemoths like Dell or in price with Joe's Screwdriver Shop down the street. They don't need the pain.

      If you want a cheap Mac, just buy an eMac or last year's model. And don't whine about "expanability," Apple hit a watershed with the G5 (like they did with the B&W G3 in 1999) and I can guarantee you that the best G4 of today is not gonna be a viable computer 3 years down the road.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    4. Re:preach on, good brother, preach on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't preach on if you can't use proper grammer and punctuation. The last thing any group needs is an advocate who writes in a semi-literate fashion.

    5. Re:preach on, good brother, preach on by laird · · Score: 1

      Because all of the companies selling stripped down PC systems for $500 are losing money on every unit they sell. It's a terrible business. Apple made a pretty reasonable business decision that they're not going to play the 'lose money for market share' game, and instead actually makes a profit. Dell is the only other profitable computer company, and while they don't release such details, analysts are pretty sure that even the master of low-margin commodity PC's loses money on their low-end systems, but they make up for it on higher-end systems, servers, etc. All of the other PC manufactures simply lose money. So Apple's strategy doesn't look too bad...

      That being said, Apple does have some pretty decent low-end systems. You can get an eMac for $799 (list), and an iBook for $999 (list), which are perfectly nice machines. Sure, you could get a somewhat cheaper PC, but they you wouldn't have a computer with the highest customer satisfaction rating in the industry. (http://sanfrancisco.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/ stories/2003/07/07/daily45.html).

  4. Believe it or not.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Despite what many people here on /. like to imply, the Apple benchmarks were about as close to objective as you're gonna get.

    Keep in mind, as well, that 10.3 is not up to release version yet. The G5 is running on incomplete software, and, at almost $900 less, still outperforms the Xeon, even with the questionable objectivity of the study. I think it says a lot that a magazine aiming to trash Apple and claim the superiority of PCs is unable to get more than a tie with their unfair methods.

    1. Re:Believe it or not.... by zpok · · Score: 5, Informative

      It was objective alright, but most (intelligent) people objected on other grounds than -erm- objectivity.

      They argued PC's should have run an optimized compiler, as the G5 should have. That way you'd have a subjective but real world benchmark. Because that's the thing most people would do with a machine like that, when programming. Only makes sense.

      What Apple showed with that benchmark was that the G5 was faster at a bunch of tasks people wouldn't necessarily want to perform under that set of circumstances.

      I personally only started drooling after that. When Stevie Wonder showed Photoshop, Mathematica, Logic/Cubase, rendering and FCP stuff. That's what this beast is made for, that's why you'd buy a G5 instead of a Dell. Not only good soft, but screaming hardware... etc etc

      And that's why this PC Mag article is for most people more interesting than two high-end machines running an open source all-purpose compiler.

      Apart from that it shows the G5 in a decent light to a mostly PC audience. Could have been worse.

      Disclaimer: if I were Apple I would have done the same thing. It might not excite me personally, but it did show the G5 advantage in a levelled field, set up by the best and most impartial people they could have hired.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
  5. I am pretty sure that you have to by maccw · · Score: 5, Funny

    run windows on that Dell too.

    --
    My karma is getting better everyday.
    1. Re:I am pretty sure that you have to by redJag · · Score: 1

      They can run Linux, BSD, etc. too, but those aren't Mac OS X :) I think a lot of PC bulls are going to have trouble with these G5s. It's been awhile since Macs were number 1. Back then, Macs were stupid, you could only play games with them, they weren't for real work. It's funny.

    2. Re:I am pretty sure that you have to by Llywelyn · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, something everyone seems to forget when they price out that PC for the comparison is the cost of porting MacOS X :)

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    3. Re:I am pretty sure that you have to by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      It's ironic then that the PC zelots now complain that the Mac has no games. Ahhj how far we've come in 10 years.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  6. Yes, but by McAddress · · Score: 5, Funny

    What I want to know is how long it takes to copy a 17 MB file from folder to another.

    1. Re:Yes, but by godawful · · Score: 2, Funny

      perhaps this should be included in their benchmarks from now on, along with installing a copy of acrobat (i hear it's upwards of 20 minutes!)

      --
      Live EVERY week... Like it's Shark Week
    2. Re:Yes, but by Brendor · · Score: 1

      Well 20 minutes of course, if the Mac is at your freelance gig and you have a dual Pentium III running NT 4 at home (which the mac should be much faster than . . . )

    3. Re:Yes, but by Marovingian · · Score: 1

      Installing Acrobat 6 on Mac OS X is now only a drag and drop install. I'd imagine on a G5 that would take only a few seconds. Windows can't touch that yet.

      --
      Cursing in the French language is like wiping your ass with silk.
  7. Re:Rough road ahead for Apple by McAddress · · Score: 1

    Gee, how original. Nobody ever has said that Apple is dying before.

  8. That is good review from a hostile source. by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    With the fact that they were giving the text to debunk apples claims and to come up with a comparable system. Is actually a good review. Could they have done things to improve Mac performance or make the tests more fair, probably. But there were things that they could probably do to the PC side to improve performance. But the fact that PC World was a hostile reviewer and they said it is a tie. Is a really good review for apple. But benchmarking PCs vs Apples is always tough because they were engineered for different jobs as shown in the results. So if you wanted a glowing PC review you subtract the benchmarks that Apple won. If you wanted a glowing Apple Review then you take out what the PCs shined in.
    I don't tend to follow benchmarks I use what seems like it is good for me, A difference in milliseconds doesn't effect me that much because normally I cannot type that fast.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  9. speed no longer matters by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For most of the stuff that most people do most of the time, today's machines are hugely overpowered, and whether the top-end G5 or the top-end Wintel machine wins the benchmark race hardly matters at all.

    Sending e-mail, writing reports, editing web pages, and 98% of what we do as software developers can be done with equal speed on a dual-processor G5, a G4-based iMac, or a G3-based iBook. Same goes for the Wintel world. Speed matters a little more if you're crunching a truly huge spreadsheet or running a filter on a large digital image. And speed really starts to count when you're editting video or running a large simulation. But most people don't run large simulations or edit video most of the time.

    Those that do a lot of video editting, etc., generally do it for a living, and the speed improvements are so important that the price differential usually isn't a problem. Time is money and all that.

    1. Re:speed no longer matters by perlchild · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Odd, how they spend so much money developing "faster" machines, that never speed up the tasks people DO! *wants faster hard drives, to speed up the saving of documents, something I do quite a bit often*

    2. Re:speed no longer matters by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's due mostly to microphallus economics, I suspect.

    3. Re:speed no longer matters by KH2002 · · Score: 5, Informative
      "For most of the stuff that most people do most of the time, today's machines are hugely overpowered... ...most people don't run large simulations or edit video most of the time."

      Many people do lots of video editing or 3D, or use virtual instruments & effects to do music. We can use every last bit of power we have- every day. Plus we're cranky and outspoken...

    4. Re:speed no longer matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many people do lots of video editing or 3D, or use virtual instruments & effects to do music. We can use every last bit of power we have- every day. Plus we're cranky and outspoken...

      Are you blind? He mentioned that.

    5. Re:speed no longer matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but.. I thought Macs sucked because they were so slow and expensive, and concentrated on crap like "user experience" and "gui".

      Now that they are comparable in power to WinTel, speed doesn't matter????

      Look if you take away the price and speed advantage of WinTel, you're left with a bunch of annoying crap!

      I'll take OS X on a 500MHz iMac over Linux or Windows any day..

    6. Re:speed no longer matters by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 1

      Now that they are comparable in power to WinTel, speed doesn't matter????

      Ah, you've mistaken me for a PC zealot. I'm actually a Mac zealot who's just sick and tired of hearing people blather on about whether this machine or that one is a few miniflops faster than the other. Now that Macs are comparable to the fastest Wintel machines in speed, they're still better (IMO) mainly due to the superior OS. I'd also take an 500 MHz iMac over a 3 GHz Dell running Windows any day.

    7. Re:speed no longer matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Uh, digital imagers read /. too, you know. ;-)

      Slashdot. It's not just for geeks any more.

    8. Re:speed no longer matters by mkldev · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There are a lot of folks who do music and stuff with the Mac for fun, which was not mentioned. Some folks even do stuff with Photoshop, FC Express, and similar.

      I'm in the final stages of production on a CD, and I'm drooling over the Dual G5 because my current G4 system was so inadequate that I had to borrow a faster one just to get through this project. I'm not even using a lot of effects, it's just that the few I am using suck lots of processor power.

      The problem is that even for ordinary users, as soon as processor power improves, some company comes along with a new version of some piece of software, some new plug-in, some new video codec, whatever, that requires more horsepower to work reliably.

      Marketing features are the great curse of processor performance....

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    9. Re:speed no longer matters by solistus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's not entirely true. For some users, the small delays with a slower machine are not a problem. I, however, find myself getting very frustrated at the iBook for being slow, I'm spoiled byt my desktop (dual G4), but even this thing bogs down with regular tasks occasionally. Also, the G5 includes many other speedbumps- HDD, memory, FSB, etc. that are more likely to be noticed by the average user than the insanely fast CPU (not that that hurts either). Also, tasks that are 'resource intensive' are becoming more and more popular. People routinely move huge amounts of data around, compile large chunks of code, play modern games, and other such tasks. My 'real' work (web design / programming) hardly taxes the resources of this system, but my casual hobby uses do quite often. Finally, consider this: Five years ago, a 233MHz G3 could get by just fine. Nowadays, you can't even run X on it (well, you can, if you don't mind waiting a minute to open a folder). The 'basic' functions most people use their computers for are growing more and more system resource intensive.

    10. Re:speed no longer matters by Morky · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't take a 500 MHz iMac over a 3 GHz Dell if you needed to keep 10 memory-hogging apps open at the same time. Keep in mind, I'm a Mac zealot, too. I convinced a friend to become a switcher and he went and bought a 1 GHz iMac (against my recommendation to get a PowerMac). It's just way too slow for him with the number of apps he likes to keep open. He needs at least a dual 1 GHz G4 with a gig of RAM to work comfortably.

    11. Re:speed no longer matters by KH2002 · · Score: 1
      Would you be happier if I'd said "many many"? The parent doesn't do justice to the large & growing number of people doing these things.

      I'm not blind, but you sound overcaffeinated. Chill.

    12. Re:speed no longer matters by eldenf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You wouldn't take a 500 MHz iMac over a 3 GHz Dell if you needed to keep 10 memory-hogging apps open at the same time.

      The amount of memory is pretty much the only hardware factor that effects how many "memory-hogging" apps you can have open comfortably. So a 500MHz iMac would do just fine given enough memory.

    13. Re:speed no longer matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're not a "switcher" if you're still running proprietary software.

    14. Re:speed no longer matters by mixonic · · Score: 0

      hey I can save your docs faster....

      but you dont really like the feature set of vim do you? The reason those things dont seem to get any faster is that pesky innovation called "new and competitive features that enhance your productivity". bet my 500 Mhz crap in a can save faster textfiles than your office 2030 running on an alpha transparency GUI. Its a tradeoff, and until someone decides that making a fast computer would be as cool as a featurefull one, we're all up a creek :)

      but then I'm a linux user in the apple section so we need to be acting like bitter enimies.....poopoo head.

      -mix

    15. Re:speed no longer matters by Marovingian · · Score: 1

      Tell your friend with the iMac that he needs to increase his physical RAM to 1 GB. That will help immensely with keeping many apps open at the same time. I have a 450 MHz Cube that can run dozens of apps at a time- but I also have 1.25 GB of RAM.

      --
      Cursing in the French language is like wiping your ass with silk.
    16. Re:speed no longer matters by perlchild · · Score: 1

      This is a discussion about hardware, about how pricier and pricier hardware seems to not accelerate(on the same software) the tasks people DO. Saying you can save a text file faster by using a better program is sidestepping the discussion. Not all "Tasks" can be improved on by software, and you don't have the choice of software for all tasks(yet) in many cases... Yet hardware's "trend" is to create illusory value, by providing higher numbers (that pesky law of faster and faster cycles hasn't been broken yet) but we compute SLOWER and are less productive than five years ago... Yes software is to blame in part, but a vim on a Pentium I 133 or a Motorola 68000 saving a 1 Megabyte file will be just as fast as a Xeon saving the same file, except in the rare, degenerate case, where the file fits entirely in cache... I'm a Linux/Mac/Windows/Tru64/SGI/Sun/AIX user in the apple section, I even used SCO(not by choice) and your point is?

    17. Re:speed no longer matters by laird · · Score: 1

      Actually, hard drives are dramatically faster than they used to be. Back when I worked at GCC Technologies writing had drive device drivers, you were pretty happy if you could move 1 MB/sec (Mac Plus to 20 MB HD). I just read a review of some 10K RPM drives (http://www.tech-report.com/reviews/2003q2/10k-com paro/index.x?pg=1) that delivered sustained throughput of over 72 MB/sec.

      Of course, systems also provide far more formatting capabilities, and have much better displays, which consumes disk space and CPU, but in return we don't have to use Electric Pencil on a TRS-80 storing to cassette tape. :-)

    18. Re:speed no longer matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Balogny. I constantly have to wait for my Powerbook G4 867 with 1024 MB of Ram to catch up to me in most everything I do. I need the fastest computer I can find...

  10. Moderator on Crack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent post is by no mean a troll! It may not be the best post ever but it is on topic and it is not trying to trash anyone.

    1. Re:Moderator on Crack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree (in principal of course, not on the matter of their actually being on "crack").
      The moderator's bias really makes for an interesting thread of discussion -- not.

  11. icon update needed by 1nv4d3r · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Shouldn't the slashdot topic icon say G5 on it by now?

    1. Re:icon update needed by ruprechtjones · · Score: 3, Funny

      Shouldn't the slashdot topic icon say G5 on it by now

      Slashdot's still waiting for the initial shipment from apple. Should be any day now.

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
  12. My favorite quote from the article by Lumpish+Scholar · · Score: 5, Funny

    "We started [Photoshop testing] with a 59.5 MB test image, but many operations completed too quickly to time...."

    --
    Stupid job ads, weird spam, occasional insight at
  13. Hell, the G5 did better than PC Mag said it did by KH2002 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The G5 did better than PC Mag's quote "generally as fast as the best Intel-based workstations currently available." The G5 won 4 of 6 tests; and its wins were mostly by much bigger margins. For Photoshop, they also said that if you factored in the Xeon's much slower-loading controls, "both Macintosh computers would would have clearly outperformed the Windows-based computer." That would make it 5 out of 6, all but one by big margins, and the one loss was almost a tie. And PC Mag calls that "neck & neck"? The G5 completely dominated in video encoding- with software that's not even G5-optimized yet.

    Another insight was that one of the oft-criticized older Mac G4s beat the Xeon in one test (two if you factor in the controls issue), nearly tied it in another, and wasn't so far behind in two more. Heh.

    1. Re:Hell, the G5 did better than PC Mag said it did by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yea your right. I decided to do the numbers.
      I took all the times for all the tests and got the percentage improvement (it is a negative number if it is slower) over the Xenon. Then I took an average of all the test and I got that on the average the G5 is 15.7122479017% faster then the Xenon. which is not truly a neck & neck race there. I would say if it was less then 5% difference but 15% seems like a good margin. And right now I don't feel like pulling my statistics book from college to check to make sure that this is a statically significant advantage over the Xenon. In case you do their are 6 Data Points with the following values points
      [11.578947368421053, 44.270833333333329, -21.374045801526716, -2.4911032028469751, 38.549618320610683, 23.739237392373923]
      Have a blast.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:Hell, the G5 did better than PC Mag said it did by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Insightful
      on the average the G5 is 15.7122479017% faster then the Xenon

      By taking percentages, you have assumed that each test is of equal relative weight. This runs the risk of oversimplification.

      For example, if computer A does task 1 in 1 second, and computer B does the same in 1.1 second, then B is slower by 10%. If A does task 2 in 5 minutes, and B does it in 6 minutes, then B is slower by 20%. If you simply take the average, then you'll show that B is slower by 15%. However, if you add up the times taken over the two tests (5m + 1s versus 6m + 1.1s), B is slower by about 20%. If task 2 is something you do a lot, then the performance difference is even more significant.

      In your particular case, the actual percentages appear to range from -2.5% to 44%. It's probably not a good idea to simplify this to just 15%.

  14. Re:Of course they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Then you agree the G5 vs. P4 benchmarks Apple paid for are less objective than the benchmarks PC Magazine conducted.

  15. What Went Wrong: A Trolling Analysis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
    1. Your troll was too long winded. This is usually a dead giveaway to the bots that they're reading a troll. Things like footnotes need to be left out. If it's worth including, it's worth including in the main body. If it's relegated to footnotes or parentheses, it should probably be cut. This is a troll, not a research paper.
    2. Apple fans are jaded to this argument. As hard as it is to believe, Slashdot is not MacTeens, so saying "Apple sucks," no matter how curtly or longwindedly, is not going to garner the response it might on other sites. Slashdot is good for Linux zealots. Slashdot's Apple fans tend be a little more mellow than, say, those on MacSlash.
    3. Your post smells like a cut-and-paste of Dvorak's tripe: Too much like a magazine article (see #1).

    Remember to keep it simple. With every bit of information you want to add to the piece, ask if it's relevant. Is it acting as filler that you need? Is it making a point or setting up a mark for a kneejerk reaction? Or are you just impressing yourself by seeing your wordcount grow every time you check it? Impact, impact, impact. This is something the British trolls never got and why you could spot them a mile away.

    Better luck next time, make sure to keep trying!

  16. Professional Journalism at its finest! by tb3 · · Score: 4, Funny

    And by outperforming top-specked Windows machines on some tests ...
    Top-specked? What the hell is that? The same kind of paint specks on both machines?

    --

    www.lucernesys.comHorizon: Calendar-based personal finance

    1. Re:Professional Journalism at its finest! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it that when mac prices are compared to PC prices, mac's are compared to Dells, which are arguable the cheapest computers you can get already built, instead of Compaq, IBM, and other companies?

  17. PSBench by Llywelyn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some of the folks in the forums over at Ars Technica has been using PS7Bench (a 21 filter test) on a 50 MB test file. Their results are summarized here.

    It is interesting to note that the G5 performs significantly better on the first 12 tests than on the last 9. The tests it performs the worst on are NTSC Colors, Accented Edges, and Water Color.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    1. Re:PSBench by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      And the reason for that, if I recall Photoshop correctly, is that the last 9 tests are all plug-ins. The G5 accelerator that Adobe shipped only sped up the core graphics engine, not any of the plug-ins.
      Supposedly PS8 (isn't that the next one?) will have all components re-compiled and optimized for the G5 systems.

      At least I'm guessing that the G5 accelerator patch is just like the accelerator that made PS compiled for 68K run much faster on PPC.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  18. Re:Of course they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're making the mistake of comparing Apple to anything else on this planet. Please don't, you will look stupid.
    Sure, Apple brainwashes people. But in a good way. I've never heard a mac user complaining, have you?

  19. Where are the 64-bit benches? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where are the 64-bit benches, against Opeteron and the Itaninum? All the benches I've seen are 32-bit. We can't get a specially compiled 64-bit version of Photoshop?

    1. Re:Where are the 64-bit benches? by 8tim8 · · Score: 1

      >We can't get a specially compiled 64-bit version of Photoshop?

      No, because neither Apple nor MS have release 64-bit versions of their OS yet.

    2. Re:Where are the 64-bit benches? by Ffakr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Aside from SPEC, what would you benchmark with to compare an itanium and a G5?
      The Itanium software list makes that Mac platform look like it's brimming over with available titles.

      Apple isn't even a niche player when compared to Itanium. Itanium and the G5 don't come close to playing on the same field (price, use, target audience) so there really isn't a reason to compare them.

      maybe it would fair if we compared 2 dual processor G5s to 1 dual 900MHz Itanium workstation since that's about where the pricing would come in.

      Opteron is another matter. AMD insists that Opteron is a server chip that does double duty in workstations. With Apple claiming that the G5 is a personal computer (a $3000 dual processor personal computer), AMD is keeping themselves out of contention as a competetor. Once the Athlon 64 hits (tomorrow), Apple will feel more pressure to deal with x86-64 comparisons. Right now, they can dodge on symantics.

      --

      I'm not feeling witty so bite me

    3. Re:Where are the 64-bit benches? by lederhosen · · Score: 1

      That is not true!!!

      MS did it ca 10 years ago with the alpha port.

  20. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    har. har. har.

    Have you priced those dual 3ghz Xeons that the G5s owned? Here's a hint: $3500 won't buy one. So which money myth is the G5 afoul of again?

  21. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Amiga+Lover · · Score: 1

    Hint. The dual 3GHz xeons that the G5s came neck and neck with were manufacturers machines. Expensive machines. Just as expensive as the G5.

    Hint 2. I'm not talking about those.

    Hint 3. I'm talking about machines you build yourself. They're cheaper. Pure fact there.

  22. mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Troll

    How is a ranting piece of Mac zealotry Insightful?

    I'm not saying the Mac is slower or trash - it looks like its the winner so far, but geez, why does Mac vs. PC have to be such personal debate?

    1. Re:mod parent down by Smurf · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I agree with most of eskimo232's opinions. I would probably not mod him "insightful", though; maybe "interesting", but that's a mater of taste.

      On the other hand, the parent post was simply expressing his opinion. He thinks that eskimo232's post does not deserve to be modded as "insightful". And he has a right to think differently. He even acknowledged that "[the Mac] looks like a winner so far".

      If moderators don't agree with him, that's OK, leave him alone. But modding him as a Troll is unacceptable, and yes, a despicable example of zealotry.

      By the way, I finally bought a Mac on Saturday (a new 15" PB), my first Mac in five years. It's sad to see that some of us, Mac users, are in fact Mac zealots.

    2. Re:mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He blew it when he made his subject line "mod parent down". That's a troll right there. Act like an ass you get modded like an ass, it's that simple.

    3. Re:mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      How is a ranting piece of Mac zealotry Insightful?

      Obviously you are new here. The Mac zealots abuse the moderation system. They mod pro-apple posts up, anti-apple post down. It is really pathetic.

      I try to moderate pro-apple post down, just to even things up a little. That post would have been a prime target.

  23. Mac Trolls by AnusesCheeses · · Score: 0, Troll

    Original as always!

    1. Re:Mac Trolls by geoffspear · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes, it's certainly trolling to suggest that waiting a minute for a menu to pop up could hurt productivity. I just love double-clicking "My Computer" on a PC and going off to make a pot of tea while it loads.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    2. Re:Mac Trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you could spend a couple of bucks and get rid of that 486 you're running.

  24. PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by valmont · · Score: 4, Insightful

    please mod parent way up. very interesting stuff. I am noting that a single-processor 1800Mhz G5 is neck-and-neck in performance with, but slightly lower than, dual-processor 2200Mhz Xeon.

    in all benchmarks i've seen, it is becoming clear that while the G5 processor itself is a dramatic improvement, the overall motherboard rearchitecture entirely designed around high bandwidth for data flow is most definitely paying off. IMHO this overall architecture, beyond the mere CPU, is what will keep paying-off in the long-run.

    The intel-based chips have been stuck around 3Ghz for a while now and my guess is a key reason has to do with heat dissipation and power consumption issues which could render dramatically faster clock speeds unsafe for your averagely-cooled machine. And this brings me to one main draw-back of the PC world: since so many components are independently architected, built and assembled by such a wide variety of vendors, no single component, and especially the CPU, fits as part of one consistent, overall hardware engineering vision. The intel chips weren't designed with efficient power consumption in mind in the first place. They were designed to sustain high clock speeds. period. MMX was an after-thought answer to Altivec. Most PC manufacturers have always grossly architected motherboards and enclosing cases without ever putting as much thought as Apple did with the new G5 architecture.

    Apple defines the requirements of every single component that goes into their boxes. They will find vendors that meet those requirements. From the processor-maker, to the heat-sink, to every single fan, to the hard drives.

    My guess is there is plenty of room for that G5 processor clock speed to grow. And when it does, the superior architecture of the enclosing case and all motherboards subsystems will both enable this clock speed growth and dramatically increase its performance boosts pay-offs.

    1. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I am noting that a single-processor 1800Mhz G5 is neck-and-neck in performance with, but slightly lower than, dual-processor 2200Mhz Xeon.

      Are you also noting that a 3Ghz P4 is quite a bit faster than both of them (and a *lot* cheaper) ? :)

      Photoshop on the G5 clearly benefits more from SMP than PS on the Xeons - probably because of the G5's much faster bus. I suspect those Xeon results come from older machines with only a 533Mhz bus and the top P4 results come from machines with an 800Mhz bus.

      The intel-based chips have been stuck around 3Ghz for a while now [...]

      Not really. Not to mention things like bus speeds have been increasing while clock speeds remain the same.

      [...] and my guess is a key reason has to do with heat dissipation and power consumption issues which could render dramatically faster clock speeds unsafe for your averagely-cooled machine.

      I doubt it. Properly designed machines likes Dells have never really had heat (or noise) problems.

      I think you'd be better off considering the marketing department and the fact intel haven't been feeling much performance pressure from AMD lately.

      And this brings me to one main draw-back of the PC world: since so many components are independently architected, built and assembled by such a wide variety of vendors, no single component, and especially the CPU, fits as part of one consistent, overall hardware engineering vision.

      This is true in most of the "build it yourself" category. Much less so for machines like the Precision workstations (and other major manufacturer equivalents). If you have an intel CPU and an intel chipset, that's about as close to a "single engineering vision" as you're going to get out of Apple.

      The intel chips weren't designed with efficient power consumption in mind in the first place.

      CPUs that are built to go into mains powered machines generally aren't - needless engineering constraint.

      MMX was an after-thought answer to Altivec.

      MMX was around on PCs at the beginning of 1997 - about two and a half years before the first G4 Macs were even available (mid to late 1999) - and its successor, SSE, was around over 6 months beforehand, so calling either of them "after thought answers to Altivec" is rather revisionist.

      Most PC manufacturers have always grossly architected motherboards and enclosing cases without ever putting as much thought as Apple did with the new G5 architecture.

      Again, you need to get away from the homebuilt crowd and into the name brand workstations.

      Apple defines the requirements of every single component that goes into their boxes. They will find vendors that meet those requirements. From the processor-maker, to the heat-sink, to every single fan, to the hard drives.

      And you think Dell, IBM, HP, etc *don't* ?

    2. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      And you think Dell, IBM, HP, etc *don't* ?

      HP and Dell go for the cheaper. IBM is better, so their machines tend to cost noticeably more.

    3. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      HP and Dell go for the cheaper. IBM is better, so their machines tend to cost noticeably more.

      Maybe in their bargain basement machines. I've never seen anything in a Precision workstation that gives the impression of cheapness.

    4. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> MMX was around on PCs at the beginning of 1997 ... and its successor, SSE, was around over 6 months beforehand

      Forgive me for asking, but how could its successor be around beforehand??

      </usage flame>

    5. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Because that I'm referring to the PMG4, not MMX, as the bit of the sentece you've left out indicates.

      Or, another way, the first PMG4 was released mid-1999 and SSE was around ~6 months beforehand.

  25. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Hawthorne01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Only if the time you spent researching products, buying them, waiting for them to arrive and then spent in building, testing and debugging are of little or no value to you. Then, yes, it's cheaper.

    Myself, I have better things to do on my time off than research computer part prices, that's why a well-built factory machine will always be my choice, be it Windows or Mac OS. YMMV, of course, that mihgt be what you consider fun.

    And remind me again: What happens when it breaks down? (and it will). Who takes care of that warranty?

    It's called TCO. There's more to the cost of a machine than just the nuts and bolts used to put it together.

    --
    "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
  26. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Amiga+Lover · · Score: 1

    My last machine took me, like I said, a week's worth of looking for parts, and I put them together over a weekend tinkering. Is that worth the $1500+ saving to me? It's more than I would have earned in a week, so yes. It's not a case of the time spent building as being of little or no value, it's whether the saving is worth more than the time taken. And as for the warranty, it's taken care of by the manufacturer of course. Same as with anything. There just happen to be component parts and several manufacturers.

  27. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by valmont · · Score: 1

    heh

    i challenge you to do the research and post your findings.

    some hints for help.

    in any case, if you aim at low-end, of course you can build a dirt-cheap PC for cheaper than a Mac. Even then eMacs and iMacs still remain an attractive alternative because of the superior operating system that is Mac OS X. And it's not like you could play any decent game worth playing on a $200 PC.

    are you up to the challenge? or are you just going to keep trolling around?

  28. And not even with Panther... by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The G5 in these tests was running 10.2.7. Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) will, by all accounts, increase performance even more. For example, from this Bare Feats test:

    "PANTHER PUNCH"
    Meanwhile, here's some data on the speed increase that OS X "Panther" (10.3) will provide G5 owners once it's released. We ran Xbench 1.1 on a G5 1.8GHz with 10.3 beta build 7B49. Compared to 10.2.7 "Jaguar"....
    ....CPU score increased 40%
    ....Thread score increased 44%
    ....Memory score increased 38%

    1. Re:And not even with Panther... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's an early beta build. From my experience, the latest Panther builds (7B6x) are much faster.

    2. Re:And not even with Panther... by big_a · · Score: 1

      It's way to early to judge how these systems will perform in the long run. OS X has been getting faster and more stable with every revision. I'm sure that when 10.3 comes out we're going to see significant speed improvements for the G5's and other speed improvement for G3 and G4 (like the Finder...)

      Can't wait!

    3. Re:And not even with Panther... by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      You are trying to claim that the CPU score is going up 40%? Considering that in CPU-intensive applications the operating system takes 2% (probably much less, just a quick measure) of the CPU time, and the operating system has nothing to do with the work the CPU is doing in my application (unless you are calling it, in which case it isn't really a CPU test), how can you possibily get that kind of speed increase? I call bullshit

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    4. Re:And not even with Panther... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      40% from an os well well can anyone say nvidia crap tweaking of the numbers

    5. Re:And not even with Panther... by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

      XBench is one of the worst benchmark programs ever.

      Don't trust anything an XBencher has to say about their XBench results. It's all crap. The test fluctuates by 10%-30% just by running it multiple times on the same computer. It's a crappy benchmark. The only reason it gets used at all is because it has a simple interface and thus anyone can run it.

      Intrepreting the scores however is like reading palms.

      It's like a weather forecast in Boston.

    6. Re:And not even with Panther... by frankie · · Score: 2, Informative
      The CPU Xbench is probably based on some set of standard arithmetic algorithms. G5-optimized math libraries might show big improvement for those cases.

      The G5 is a sincerely new and strange chip with pipelines unlike its Motorola ancestors. Binaries designed for PPC/G3/G4 run inefficiently on the G5 compared to true native binaries.

    7. Re:And not even with Panther... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not Apple tweaking it, sorry. These are benchmarks from third party benchmarking tools, and just plain ol' applications. The gain is there under Panther. Sorry to disappoint.

    8. Re:And not even with Panther... by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

      You are trying to claim that the CPU score is going up 40%? Considering that in CPU-intensive applications the operating system takes 2%...

      I think you have the wrong end of the stick. Applications are loading and calling routines from the Cocoa and Carbon runtime libraries. Upgrading the OS means (inter alia) upgrading the libraries, hopefully delivering a 'CPU' improvement to all applications.

    9. Re:And not even with Panther... by Dan+Farina · · Score: 1

      For the love of...

      If your scores increase that much, there was either a serious problem in the old version or they are talking out of their ass.

      No offense. Yanking a 40% increase in performance on a particular algorithm/binary from an OS change is pretty hard to believe.

      There are some exceptions, especially regarding parallel computing when problematic concurrency issues apply, i.e. deadlock and serialization, where the scheduler can make a huge difference....but what exactly are these abstracted metrics measuring?

      As a instinct, I sense marketing.

  29. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by anetic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure you can always build a pc alternative for half the price but one never thinks about the number and frequencies of viruses and worms that hit the pc's and just how much time is lost hurdling these regular debacles !

  30. Not a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative
    The Dell 650 uses more reliable (and more expensive) ECC memory. Apple does not have any product offerings that use ECC memory.

    A faster processor than the one tested is available for the Dell 650: 3.06 GHz with 1 MB L2 cache, which is double the standard 512 KB L2 cache.

    For new orders, Apple can not deliver a dual-processor G5 for 3-5 weeks.

    Dell offers 10,000 and 15,000 RPM Ultra320 SCSI drives as an option, with up to 4 drives. Apple only offers up to 2 SATA drives.

    The Dell 650 can be configured with Linux.

  31. who cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, for one, would rather use a sane, reasonable operating system without such draconian crap as Windoze DRM, no matter what the speed of the machine.

    Is there anyone here who actually enjoys the Windows user experience so much that he would spend $3,000 on a P4 with WinDOS XP rather than sink the money into a loaded G5 with OS X, an OS that actually makes sense, looks good, and works?

    Jesus Christ.

  32. Not a troll either by zpok · · Score: 1

    Can you give a price tag for all that?

    I'm not into semantic nitpicking but since you're now describing the Ideal Workstation Configuration (tm), it's only fair to say how much this is going to cost, mmm?

    We're talking about a Serious Computer (another tm) that does iTunes as well, not the Perfect umptydumpty Dollar Workstation, although it means something that you're making the comparison, quite a compliment, me thinks.

    PS: pricetag?

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
    1. Re:Not a troll either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without actually adding it all up, the price limit for a fully tricked-out PowerMac G5 is (obviously) significantly lower than the Dell, simply because the Dell is a more capable platform with more options available. and the Dell is available today. today's components at today's prices. not tomorrow's components at today's prices.

  33. Finally! a good 'troll'! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly - don't get me wrong, i'm a mac and pc user (a mac user right now - powerbook 12" :), and i love macs.

    But this is the kind of thinking that mac users, no, mac 'zealots' never understand. just as we think PC users 'suck' and have all these misconceptions about our wonderful macs (which is often the case), in just as many cases we have all these misconceptions about PC users too. and often to a higher degree. we're always making rediculous claims about PC's just because they don't have an operating system that suits us, and (although i might be flamed for this) because in the back of our mind we definately need to justify to ourselves spending more on the average mac than a pc.

    now that we have caught up well and truely in the high-end computing stakes - this is cause for rejoice such that we can hold our own against 3ghz+ pentiums. but there is still a long way to go..

  34. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Unregistered · · Score: 1

    you forget that most prebuilt PCs use really shity parts in places that don't go on the little sticker thingy that comes on the front.

  35. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Zapman · · Score: 1

    I see both sides of this. I can save a little money (it you actually buy a legal version of windows for dual boot, it eats a lot of the price savings) and build it myself, or I can get a dell.

    I tell all my friends to just get a Dell and I personally build my own. This way, I know I get good parts, I know it's not going to fail quickly, and I know that I don't have to offer tech support to my parents.

    That, and I can also get one of those sweet Shuttle XPC cases.

    --
    Zapman
  36. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by vonFinkelstien · · Score: 1
    Time = money.
    DIY = (Time to find parts, time to build machine, time to set up software, time to fix Windoze problems).
    DIY = lots of lost time.
    DIY = lots of lost money.

  37. Oh, boy! A NEW troll! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was getting SO tired of the "I don't want to start a holy war here..." post.

    Tell ya what, bucko, if you had to take tin snips to a Powerbook to install an AirPort card, you're not a "Computer Guy," you're just a fucking moron.

    1. Re:Oh, boy! A NEW troll! by vilms · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Well done sir.
      One of the funniest things I've read today.

  38. Re:I HATE MAC'S by godawful · · Score: 1

    by chance, is she still waiting for a 70 meg file to transfer?

    you know, one that would take minutes to transfer on your a600?

    --
    Live EVERY week... Like it's Shark Week
  39. Do I hear a goalpost moving? by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So, let's see.

    First, they said the Mac was hopelessly slow. Now we've got the G5's that are more than a match for much higher clocked x86 boxes.

    Then they said the Mac was still too expensive. Now the top of the line G5 costs $3000, and the cheapest Dell with dual 3.06GHz Xeons, when you configure it to match the dual 2.0GHz G5's base configuration as closely as possible*, costs $4372. And that price has actually INCREASED BY $600 since June 28, when I first spec'd out an identical system in a previous discussion.

    Now, they're down to "but you can have the Dell today, you have to wait two weeks for the G5."

    Just give it up already, x86 apologists.

    ~Philly

    *I configured a Dell PWS 450 by selecting two 3.06GHz Xeons, downgrading to 512MB of RAM, upgrading to a 120GB hard drive (still smaller than the G5's 160MB), upgrading to the cheapest drive that could write DVDs, adding a modem, adding a FireWire card, and subtracting a monitor. Components not specifically listed here were left at their default settings.

    1. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, you'll have to wait 3-5 weeks for your G5 and, while you wait, component prices should drop an average of 3-5%, but you'll still pay the same amount for the Mac. A faster Intel box will very likely be available then, as well. Yes, the goal post is indeed moving!

    2. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by phillymjs · · Score: 3, Informative

      ...while you wait, component prices should drop an average of 3-5%, but you'll still pay the same amount for the Mac.

      Did you even read my post?

      The G5 still costs the same price it did in June, but the Dell costs $600 MORE than it did back then. I'd be interested to hear how little your theory on constantly-falling component prices explains that particular fact.

      ~Philly

    3. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by Triumph+The+Insult+C · · Score: 3, Funny

      yea, well my dell came with a mouse with more than 1 button.

      beat that!

      --
      vodka, straight up, thank you!
    4. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by phillymjs · · Score: 1

      Well, it looks like your keyboard didn't include shift keys. :-)

    5. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by dootbran · · Score: 1

      eh, hem...
      He did manage to use an exclamation point.

    6. Re:Do I hear a goalpost moving? by valkraider · · Score: 1

      Your Dell mouse ate my term paper... And it was a really good term paper.

  40. Re:Dells for computing and frying eggs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Properly designed machines likes Dells have never really had heat (or noise) problems.

    Dude, what planet are you from? I've seen many instances of Dell's spontaneously shutting down because of heat issues, including my own. This is a recent thing with recent hardware. Not good. And Dell laptops are great for camping because you can work and then use it to fry something.

    There is a real problem with heat in the PC world and someone better figure it out soon.

  41. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by zpok · · Score: 1

    But in the end your home made thingy won't run OS X ...

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  42. Re:Huh. by Fatmiko1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You forget, the Xeon machine has dual 3GHZ processors. The G5 has only dual 2 GHZ processors. Combining the processors of each machine, there is a 2GHZ advantage on the Xeons behalf.

    I'd say it's far from "optimistic" hype and more towards "holy aluminum shit, batman" hype.


    my 2 cents

  43. Re:I HATE MAC'S by steeviant · · Score: 1

    This had me rolling around on the floor literally... side splitting!

    Have you considered a career in stand-up comedy?

    You could call your act "the computer guy"

  44. Re:Huh. by maunleon · · Score: 1

    Not sure how many times this has to be brought up, but.. you can't compare GHz across different processor architecture.

    Case in point, the 500 MHz Alpha could keep up with processors way above its clock speed.

  45. Why only compare top of the line systems? by Cpt_Corelli · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's face it: most people will not buy a new computer for > $4000.

    It would be far more interesting to see what you can get for different amounts of money. E.g. What is the price / performance for a system for $900, $1000, $2000 and so on. This is where I believe Apple will have a hard time keeping up with Intel based products.

    1. Re:Why only compare top of the line systems? by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1
      Well, you will buy a computer for 4 grand if it is going to help you make more money. So, on a bussines enviroment, it is acceptable.

      One wrong argument to defend Apple computers is to say that you have a good reselling price for a 2 year system, compared to a 2 year PC system. It is partially true: Macs have better mechanical components (fans and stuff) that degrade with time, so you can have a good system for 4 years or more.

      But what is happening now on the used Apple marketplace is just casual: the G4s faced a tough time, so the new computers were not so good compared to the old ones. But just wait 3 months, for real aviability of the G5s, and see the price drop on used G4 and G3 systems.

    2. Re:Why only compare top of the line systems? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh...no. Apple kicks PC ass in performance/price. Look @ Virginia Tech...they found that out and ran with it.

    3. Re:Why only compare top of the line systems? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you will buy a computer for 4 grand if it is going to help you make more money. So, on a bussines enviroment, it is acceptable.

      Sorry, but that's not how it works. Most companies have a fixed IT budget. If you want a $4K computer you will have to prove that it will improve your productivity 4 times as much as a $1K computer.

  46. The only way to solve this... by Zugok · · Score: 5, Funny

    is by Celebrity Deathmatch. Nothing like a good fist fight. What they're computers? I guess we'll have to settle for a game of chess then.

    --
    "I just can't sit while people are saying nonsense in a meeting without saying it's nonsense" J Watson, Sci Am 288:(4)51
  47. Re:I HATE MAC'S by fyonn · · Score: 1

    one that would take minutes to transfer on your a600?

    I dno't recall the amiga 600 being well known for fast transfers, it's only got a 7.x mhz cpu after all

    dave

  48. What gives!?! by PasteEater · · Score: 5, Funny

    Talk about a tragedy! Dude, my P4 takes like four seconds to install spyware, where my Mac, won't even let me install it at all!

    And does anyone realize that Macs don't even run Windows natively? What's the deal with that? What am I supposed to do with that software that I bought at the checkout line in Walgreens?

    I mean benchmarks are cool and all, but let's focus on the important thing here: will it be able to run crippled software made by monopolistic theives who want to take over the world?

    You crazy Slashdot people sure know how to blow things out of proportion.

    --
    There are two kinds of people in the world: those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
  49. Re:I HATE MAC'S by soulnet · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hmm, lucky thing I got a 12" powerbook then. Don't think it took more than 5 minutes to pop the battery out and slide my Airport Extreme card in. Perhaps I didn't do it correctly though. Probably should have pryed the battery out instead of using the release, eh?

  50. Re:Huh. by Fatmiko1 · · Score: 1

    That's exactly my point.

  51. Wins 4-out-of-6 = "generally as fast"??? by G4from128k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The review begrudgingly acknowledges that the G5 is "generally as fast" as the Dell, but the performance table suggests the G5 is much faster than that. The G5 bests the Dell in 4 out of the 6 tests. While the G5 is more than twice as fast on one test, the Dell wins by an unnoticable 2.5% for one of its wins.

    Its not surprising that PCMag is a sore loser because they are afraid of losing subscribers to Mac magazines.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  52. Re:Huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You don't really know anything about computers, do you?

    Nevermind, I forgot where I was.

  53. Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yup!

  54. (Now go jack off to anime, hick.) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you build your own cars? House? Microwave?

    Do you make your own shoes? Toothpaste? Condoms?

    It PROBABLY is cheaper to roll your own. So?

    *BING* Guess what?

    People find it WORTH the cost to buy a product!!!

    You're a few hundred years late of your BARTERING.

    (Now go jack off to anime, hick.)

  55. To:I HATE MAC'S..because I'm a moron... by z-kungfu · · Score: 2, Funny

    Stay away from my computers. If it took you anything over 30 minutes to complete that task you are a moron. When you get your airport card there are these little things called instructions. If you simply follow them it is as easy as 1,2,3... But he way how long have you had your MCSE?

  56. Didn't seem to use the G5 Photoshop plugin either by DaleBob · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While they did acknowledge that "Current users can download 64-bit plug-ins or upgraded versions of [Photoshop]," they also suggest that they didn't use the Adobe G5 plugin for the test: "the PowerPC G5... will continue to run 32-bit applications (like those in our test suite)."

    I guess they were trying to make the test "fair" by not using code optimized for the G5?

  57. Re:Of course they are by MoneyT · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Mac users complain very loudly when something doesn't go right.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  58. Shakespeare... by deep+square+leg · · Score: 2, Informative

    Apologies for this off-topic post, but 'wherefore' translates better as 'why' than 'where' (as many people think).

    Juliet was basically saying "Why art thou Romeo" (as in why is he from a rival family) rather than asking where he is that that moment.

    Therefore, you are asking Objectivity why it is what it is :)

  59. New Mac (was Re:mod parent down) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Congratulations on the PowerBook. I bought a 12 inch just after they came out - great machine. It occurred to me the other day that unlike my Linux and WinNT/2K boxes, I don't know how the filesystem is layed out - not because I don't want to know, but because I never needed to find out!

    Anyway, enjoy the PowerBook.

  60. Re: Hardly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There's hardly any software you can install on the Mac. Everyone has left it behind (including the worm authors, but also the overwhelming majority of useful software and fun game software as well)"

    You're so full of shit. I can't stand moronic statements like yours. Aside from the biggest names (Dreamweaver, Office, Photoshop, Illustrator, Toast, etc., etc., etc.) that I use daily on a Mac, there are thousands of software titles for everything I could ever want.
    And of course, there's fink and X11 (http://fink.sourceforge.net/doc/x11/index.php) for thousands more OS X apps.
    Try wrapping that tiny mind of yours around this concept. Stupid fucktard. Quit making up words like "blunding." If you're stuck at an eighth grade reading level, seek help.
    More helpful links for the google-challenged:
    http://www.versiontracker.com/ macosx/index.shtml
    http://www.apple.com/downloads /macosx/
    http://www.macosxapps.com/

  61. See for yourself... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    10.2.7 is essentially a short term hack to get G5's out the door. Beta versions of 10.3, on all tests run - including just raw benchmarking applications like Xbench - show these 40%-type improvements under 10.3. No worries; it will be confirmed within a couple months anyway when 10.3 is released.

  62. Err, speak for yourself. by Paradox · · Score: 1

    "98% of what we do as software developers can be done with equal speed on a dual-processor G5, a G4-based iMac, or a G3-based iBook."

    Speak for yourself. I have done software development on my Dual G4, my 800mhz iBook, and my friends shiny new G5 for an afternoon. IDEs are ever-increasing in complexity and responsibility. Apple's new XCode and VC++ have for a long time done many, many things that require quite a lot of lookups, analysis, and parse tree building.

    Sorry, these things create stutters, slowdowns, and obnoxious hangups when I develop. I've used VC++, Eclipse, ProjectBuilder and XCode. All benefit hugely from faster machines. I wince at coding using a real IDE like Eclipse or Xcode on my iBook, which has a max ram loadout. It's not a huge deal on my G4, and I'll wager a G5 eats it alive and asks for seconds.

    On the G5, everything was happening instantly. It was kinda eerie. I built the newest Ruby on it for my friend, using xlc (the better cache management actually speeds ruby up appreciably, like 10% in some operations!).

    It took about 25-40 seconds ( I wasn't timing, so I'll keep the range broad). That's compared to about 3:25 on my dual G4. Admittedly, I'm not using xlc here, but it gives you something to think about.

    Fast compilers are very important to people who rely on their compilers to find errors, the build-fix-build-fix cycle is standard procedure anywhere you go, and faster compiling computers make you wait less time for that.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  63. You're neglecting something important by Paradox · · Score: 1

    "Are you also noting that a 3Ghz P4 is quite a bit faster than both of them (and a *lot* cheaper) ? :)"

    Umm.. you know why these benchmarks that everyone does are stupid? Because the test the machine doing one task at once. Sure, the task has multiple parts, and may include more than just the processor, but all too often we see these little head-in-the-sand benchmarks that make the 3Ghz P4 look so good.

    It's not. Want a real test? Run two of these benchmark tests simultaneously. Run 3. The p4 has a vastly higher clock speed. Unsurprisingly, when you focus it on one small task, it completes it quite fast, even though it's doing so less efficiently.

    The Opteron and PPC970 do more things efficiently. As you might guess, this is the "real world" scenario, where our machines do many, many things at once. Your machine is performing dozens of distinct tasks, right now. Many Opteron reviews are claiming the chip doesn't benchmark well under the current idea of what benchmarking should be, but in real world tests they easily outperform the P4s. No one questions them. The G5 and the Xeons are the same way. When you try and take account of the innumerable factors that make a computer fast and condense them down to a small set of "average values" you're going to get a distorted picture, favoring people who play the benchmark game.

    Ironically enough, the Xeons and the G5 still royally stomped on everyone else. I find this very satisfying. I like seeing those silly P4 chips lose at their own marketing game.

    These benchmarks are stupid, small, outdated, and almost seemed designed from the ground up to favor machines with high clockspeed.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    1. Re:You're neglecting something important by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Umm.. you know why these benchmarks that everyone does are stupid? Because the test the machine doing one task at once. Sure, the task has multiple parts, and may include more than just the processor, but all too often we see these little head-in-the-sand benchmarks that make the 3Ghz P4 look so good.

      Given OS X's poor GUI responsiveness, an attempt to recreate a "realistic" multitasking benchmark is going to make it look worse, not better.

      It's not. Want a real test? Run two of these benchmark tests simultaneously. Run 3. The p4 has a vastly higher clock speed. Unsurprisingly, when you focus it on one small task, it completes it quite fast, even though it's doing so less efficiently.

      The P4 completes a single task faster because it's a faster CPU.

      Any set of multiple CPU-heavy tasks is going to scale better on a multi-CPU machine, or on a machine kitted out with a workstation-oriented CPU than a regular consumer-oriented single-CPU one. This is hardly a revelation, nor disputed.

      The Opteron and PPC970 do more things efficiently.

      You need to define "efficiency" before you start talking about it. What's it being measured against ? Power consumption ? Clock rate ? Time ? Money ?

      As you might guess, this is the "real world" scenario, where our machines do many, many things at once. Your machine is performing dozens of distinct tasks, right now.

      Most people only perform (or, more importantly, care about) one CPU-intesive task at a time (and most of them only for a few seconds at a time).

      Many Opteron reviews are claiming the chip doesn't benchmark well under the current idea of what benchmarking should be, but in real world tests they easily outperform the P4s.

      You also need to define "real world". No-one is going to argue that multi-CPU machines, or machines with big CPU caches, or machines with wide, fast buses scale better with multiple CPU-heavy jobs than a single CPU machine. In the "Real world" bit of the market P4s are aimed at, this scenario is neither common nor representative.

      No one questions them.

      They're probably not trying to say what you are.

      The G5 and the Xeons are the same way.

      A Xeon *is* a P4, only with a bigger cache and some bells & whistles like SMP.

      When you try and take account of the innumerable factors that make a computer fast and condense them down to a small set of "average values" you're going to get a distorted picture, favoring people who play the benchmark game.

      The "benchmark game" ? You're going to have a hell of a job convincing me running numerous simultaneously CPU-heavy tasks is anything appraching relevant to most users, even professionals.

      Ironically enough, the Xeons and the G5 still royally stomped on everyone else. I find this very satisfying. I like seeing those silly P4 chips lose at their own marketing game.

      Once again, the differences between P4s and Xeons are farly minor.

      There's no more of a "marketing game" around the P4 than any other processor. For the life of me, I can't figure out why so many people have such a chip on their shoulder about this CPU.

      These benchmarks are stupid, small, outdated, and almost seemed designed from the ground up to favor machines with high clockspeed.

      Which explains why a few years ago they great for showing how more powerful CPUs with lower clockspeeds were faster than ones with higher clockspeeds, right ?

      This simple fact is these "type" of benchmarks are designed for showing which machine is faster under a typical workload - single CPU-heavy processes running at a time, usually for short periods of time. The workloads you appear to believe an Opteron would shine in - multiple CPU-heavy tasks running simultaneously - is more the arena of servers, not a market the P4 is aimed at.

  64. This is like, trolling for justice :) by Paradox · · Score: 1

    I have to say, this is probably one of the funniest things I've read this month. It's like a troll in the opposite direction! :)

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  65. Re:I HATE MAC'S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Why didn't you just take the keyboard off and slide the card in?

  66. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You people act like this is some extremely difficult task. This isn't much harder than making sure you have the right configuration for the G5 at the apple store. You would just pick the parts needed at newegg or mwave and put them together when they arrive through the mail. This is probably 2 or 3 hours extra work including installing the OS (linux in my case). It wouldn't be as fast as a G5 based system but it would be $500 to $1k cheaper depending on the components you want and be fast enough for all but the extreme power user.

    I love MacOS X and i think its great that apple finally has a system with some speed but they need a system that competes in the same price range with p4 and athlon based systems. The majority of people out there are not going to pay $2k or more for a computer in today's world.

  67. Re:I HATE MAC'S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Dood, I totally understand man!!

    I like, totally feel you. I had to install some RAM today which meant I had to open the case. No problem with my old G4 - the side just popped down. But strangely enough on my PC, there were these little metal things with "+" marks on top of them. I have no clue what the hell Dell was thinking when they put them in, but it caused my case to not want to come apart. So I took a hammer to the case, and it came apart.

    After I got the case open, I called Dell to tell them how "rediculous" it was to have the average user go thru all that work, just to install RAM. They told me I should have just read the instructions and slid the outer door next time. I think I detected a hint of sarcasm in his voice, so I told him off, and went back to installing my RAM.

    I look at the motherboard and see the RAM slots. But, when I tried to install the RAM, these little metal hooks were in the way. I tried pushing the RAM into it, but nothing! Freakin' Dell! What the hell are they doing?!
    So I take a file and start filing off the metal things, careful not to break the mother-bored.

    I call Dell again, and tell them they are morons and their machines are designed really badly.

    They told me that the metal things were what held the RAM modules in place. I think those sons of bitches were just lying to me to cover their asses.

    Next time I'll get an a600, like you have, unless it's a Dell.

  68. Re:Didn't seem to use the G5 Photoshop plugin eith by Toraz+Chryx · · Score: 1

    Code can be optimised for the PPC970 execution pipeline / caching without hulking 64bit integer values and pointers around.

    So I'd say that they didn't hint that they weren't using the 7.0.1 G5 patch ;)

  69. Speed will always matter. by Onan · · Score: 1

    I've seen people make this argument for at least ten years now. (And I suspect that it's been made far longer than that, and I'm just displaying my relative inexperience.)

    It always turns out to be pretty shortsighted. Yes, an average new computer is overkill for most users the day it's purchased. Software is targetted at the average computer in use, new computers tend to be faster than the average, so new computers are always overkill. This is so definitional as to border on tautology.

    But software continues to evolve to take advantage of new hardware resources.

    It's easy to just dismiss this as laziness an inpcompetence on the part of software developers; to say that they're not really adding anything new, they can just afford to be sloppy now.

    Obviously that's an oversimplification: some software becomes more demanding because it simply does things which were not practical with more limited resources. But even in the worst case, where new software is less efficient, I'd still call this a feature rather than a bug. If developers can spend less time on optimization, they can spend more time on more important things. Those efforts can go into clarity, security, consistency, or portability.

    (Clearly some developers, notably those working for a certain little startup in Redmond, will not use these freed-up resources wisely, and will instead just take the opportunity to write a larger volume of bad code. But those are the same developers who probably would've buggered up the optimization process anyway, so this is really no worse.)

    If we'd just stopped when we had enough hardware to speedily run common user applications, it would be too minimal to handle taxing things like tcp/ip, which you might have found to be handy.

    1. Re:Speed will always matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If developers can spend less time on optimization, they can spend more time on more important things. Those efforts can go into clarity, security, consistency, or portability.

      Maybe...or it could just suck all the way around. Like Java, for instance.

  70. Re:G5 vs P200? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll-boy, I love ya like a brother, but I gotta say this 20 minutes installing Photoshop thing doesn't make sense. And whose job is copying a 17-meg file? I think the next time they post an Apple story, you should chime in on how it took a day to install an Airport card that take 20 minutes to copy 17 meg files. I think that would be a way better troll...

  71. can Mac use a 3-button mouse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can The Mac use a 3 button mouse?
    Purity is good but I sure like hitting the middle button to get in and out of tabs in Mozilla.

    TKR spiritposts2@yahoo.com

    1. Re:can Mac use a 3-button mouse? by FunkDaddy · · Score: 1

      Of course it can, pretty much any USB mouse will work. I have 4/5 button Kensington on mine.

  72. Re:Dells for computing and frying eggs by mixonic · · Score: 0

    Dude, what planet are you from?

    Dude, Obviously a Dell user......

    -mix

  73. Re:Didn't seem to use the G5 Photoshop plugin eith by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

    So I'd say that they didn't hint that they weren't using the 7.0.1 G5 patch ;)

    And I wouldn't not say that they didn't not hint that they didn't not choose to not use the patch.

  74. Look at the total scores by homb · · Score: 1

    If you look at the total scores, the distribution is as follows:

    With Final Cut Pro, the G5 and G4 comparison is:

    G5: 5306.47s
    G4: 7481.06s (41% more than the G5)

    Without Final Cut Pro, the full comparison is:

    G5: 1206.47s
    G4: 1281.06s (6% more than the G5)
    Dell: 1462.4s (21% more than the G5, 14% more than the G4)

    This shows quite a different picture. Of course one could argue that the tests should be weighted differently, etc...
    All you have to do to figure out which machine you should get is to weigh the scores the way you'd use the machine.
    Now I would have loved compile times but you can't get everything...

  75. Re:I HATE MAC'S by ChicagoBiker · · Score: 1
    Here, maybe this will help you next time.

    I've done this twice, both times it took all of 10 mins.

  76. Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on me. by Paradox · · Score: 1

    Given OS X's poor GUI responsiveness, an attempt to recreate a "realistic" multitasking benchmark is going to make it look worse, not better.

    Yeah, um, it's plenty responsive on my iBook 800. I do not know where you're drawing this from. Are you complaining that OSX doesn't have a smooth scroll feature like Windows does? They do in Panther, but honestly I don't like them. It's a lot harder to tell how far you're scrolling when there is an animation delay imposed.

    The P4 completes a single task faster because it's a faster CPU.

    I'm sorry, you can't get away with that here. The P4 has a much, much higher clock rate. It means that yes, for doing one thing, especially one more-or-less simple thing, you probably will win in a footrace. Duh.

    It doesn't mean that your machine will do better at multiple parallel tasks. The P4 is just slower at it. Also, its architecture won't do contest switches as quickly between threads. Part of the reason Intel is adding the on-die memory controller and more cache is to try and hide this fact. Intel's hit the limit with the P4, more or less. Maybe they can get a bit more clockspeed, but they're topping out with what's reasonable in an aircooled machine.

    The G5s are keeping up with an unoptimized OS, a lack of optimizing compiler, at a clockspeed much lower than the architecture's maximum.

    You also need to define "real world". No-one is going to argue that multi-CPU machines, or machines with big CPU caches, or machines with wide, fast buses scale better with multiple CPU-heavy jobs than a single CPU machine. In the "Real world" bit of the market P4s are aimed at, this scenario is neither common nor representative.

    Why not ask GamePC to define it. They're the one I'm angry about. You have a funny idea of "real world" must be. Everyday web browsing and use? Everyone I know tends to check their email and browse the web while their email loads. Now, those are both processor and memory intensive tasks. Your mail program index, spam filters, and places your mail in a data hierarchy. Meanwhile your web browser is rendering relatively complex operations. Usually it's doing them in parallel. Scrolling is also relatively expensive.

    This is an everyday case that the P4 copes with poorly. The ameliorating effect of the larger cache and memory controller only carries you so far.

    A typical game is a nightmare for a single P4 machinel Multiple threads all doing different memory and I/O intensive things, with your video card you can't always use DMA! Sometimes the P4 has to send stuff manually. The P4 can only keep up with modern games by virtue of its high clock speed. As the Opteron and G5 catch up, the performance barrier will only become more and more apparent.

    As it stands now, I still feel that a 1.8ghz G5 or Opteron will "blow the doors off" a P4. I've gotten the chance to use said G5 and my friend's P4 is roughly of the spec we're talking about. By the way, did you notice that the G5s aren't set up to use their altivec, while the P4s are going to use SSE? Yet another handicap. The altivec doesn't just help with floating point you know. It does integer ops just as fast, on a variety of sizes. Auto-vectorization in a compiler would turn ordinary code into screamingly fast code. With no OS optimized for it and no optimizing compiler.

    The G5 is blindfolded, has one hand tied behind its back and the other opponent has a spear. And it still wins.

    Everyone who's tried it agrees, it's impossible to get the G5 to slow down. Three apps open up as fast as one does (unless they have to do network stuff to boot, then the network latency comes in of course). My friend's P4 with lots of the best DDR ram he can slot still stutters on the Start menu, let alone starting several apps at once.

    And no, he doesn't suck at building machines. He's actually quite good at it, I assure you.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  77. I'm such a prick by jcsehak · · Score: 1

    ... but I have to comment on this. I didn't realise it myself until recently -- "wherefore" means "why," not "where." And duh, Romeo's like right in front of her, why would she say "where are you?"

    --

    c-hack.com |
  78. Re:I HATE MAC'S by Boeing777 · · Score: 0

    stop bloody comparing Mac to PCs. it's like trying to fool people by saying that A Pontiac is just like a BMW. Well, hello!
    As for PCMAG, I wouldn't trust a magazine that still believes that Windows is the best OS. Cheers

  79. Can't we play... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Global Thermonuclear War?? PLEASE????

  80. By the numbers, the Mac beat the PC by laird · · Score: 1

    If you average the results across all of the tests, you'll see that the Dual G5 Mac beat the Dual Xenon PC by an average of 22% overall. Of course, there were some tests where the PC beat the Mac by a bit, and some tests where the Mac beat the PC by quite a bit, so as always it's dangerous to generalize from any benchmark to performance on the applications you use. But it looked like overall the Mac beat the PC by a fairly significant margin. I'm not sure that a 22% performance boost alone is enough justification for a platform switch, but it certainly doesn't hurt.

    The dual G5 also beat the dual G4 by around 45%, so for Mac users, it's a clear win.

    (though it also beat the Dual G4 by around 45%). Of course, the test results bounced around pretty significantly, so it's not completely unfair to describe it as a tie

  81. Re:I HATE MAC'S by markomarko · · Score: 1

    This, my friends, is a parody of a genuine Troll. The joke is on you, you didn't get it. Good on you, AC. The only thing more annoying than a real troll are those who respond to one.

  82. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    Yeah, um, it's plenty responsive on my iBook 800.

    Ah, this must be one of those special edition machines Apple gives to Mac Fans.

    I do not know where you're drawing this from.

    A great deal of experience. I've be using OS X off and on since the public beta, on a large selection of machines all the way up to (recently and briefly) a 1.6Ghz G5. OS X's GUI remained unresponsive and chunky on all of them.

    I bought a Rev A 667 because I wanted to run OS X. Then I bought Jaguar because I was digusted at how frustratingly slow 10.1.x was to use. Then I sold it because 10.2 didn't make any appreciable difference.

    Recently I took a 1Ghz model for a week-long test drive to see if the situation had improved. It hadn't.

    I used to think it was a hardware issue - after all, OS X is doing a lot and shuffling a lot of data around and until recently, Macs have been hamstrung by (relatively) slow machines and poor bus speeds. On the other hand, the raw power of the machines was not lacking.

    Are you complaining that OSX doesn't have a smooth scroll feature like Windows does?

    No, I'm complaining that under any sort of trivial usage, the GUI is unresponsive. Slow to manipulate windows. Slow to access menus. Slow to switch between applications. Etc.

    I'm sorry, you can't get away with that here. The P4 has a much, much higher clock rate. It means that yes, for doing one thing, especially one more-or-less simple thing, you probably will win in a footrace.

    In other words, it'll win because it's faster. I'm glad you agree with me.

    It doesn't mean that your machine will do better at multiple parallel tasks. The P4 is just slower at it.

    Available evidence would suggest otherwise.

    Also, its architecture won't do contest switches as quickly between threads.

    In terms of what ? Relative to the clock rate ? Relative to real time ? Show me the numbers.

    Part of the reason Intel is adding the on-die memory controller and more cache is to try and hide this fact.

    Improving CPU performance is "hiding the fact" ?

    Intel's hit the limit with the P4, more or less.

    Intel probably disagrees. They've demo'd P4s at over 4Ghz. Heck, crazy overclockers have managed to get currently shipping machines over 4Ghz.

    Maybe they can get a bit more clockspeed, but they're topping out with what's reasonable in an aircooled machine.

    I remember this being said about the 50Mhz 486. And the 66Mhz Pentium. And the 300Mhz Pentium 2. And the early Pentium ~600Mhz 3s. Then the 1Ghz Pentium 3s. Etc.

    So, pardon me if I place a touch more faith in intel than a slashdot pundit.

    The G5s are keeping up with an unoptimized OS, a lack of optimizing compiler, at a clockspeed much lower than the architecture's maximum.

    Indeed, "keeping up" being the appropriate description.

    Everyday web browsing and use? Everyone I know tends to check their email and browse the web while their email loads. Now, those are both processor and memory intensive tasks.

    *boggle*.

    Now, I can't profess to know the software you're using, the size of your inbox or the web pages you browse, but they must be pretty damn impressive if you consider web browsing and email checking to be "processor and memory intensive tasks".

    Right now I have about 50 tabs open spread over 4 Firebird windows, 5 IE windows, Outlook checking 6 email accounts every 2 minutes, a VMWare machine idling away in the background, MP3s playing, 6 Word documents open, 4 IM windows, 15 terminal windows and about 30G of data being copied over a 100M network link.

    Now, in my experience that sort of workload puts the load on my machine well and truly above the "average user" running an email program, a few web browser windows and maybe listening to MP3s. Just for kicks I fired up task manager on the other screen to watch the CPU usage while I worked. It's averaged a

  83. Re:Not just Cousin Ned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Only if the time you spent researching products[...] are of little or no value to you. Myself, I ...

    I am sure you are well paid for your time spent on slashdot :)

    Also, that "are" should really be "is": it goes with the TIME, not with the list of things one spends it on (i.e. the time IS of little value).

  84. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink.

    You, sir, are an idiot, and a fool.

    One day, perhaps, you will learn reading comprehension.

    Until then, may you rest often and well, and have your gonads chopped off by a burglar. Because it would be a affront to humanity for your genes to be passed on. There are already too many conformist sheep wandering around.

  85. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by Paradox · · Score: 1

    A great deal of experience. I've be using OS X off and on since the public beta, on a large selection of machines all the way up to (recently and briefly) a 1.6Ghz G5. OS X's GUI remained unresponsive and chunky on all of them.

    Okay, at first I thought you were just trolling, because my experiences with the G5 have been liquid smooth. Maybe we're using different meaningw or responsive sand smooth? On my dual 800 and even on my iBook there an be some frame loss when dragging very large windows or doing that minimize effect, but it's only when the machine seems especially occupied, and doesn't affect the rate at which things move.

    Maybe you're referring to the mouse-interaction delay bug that very few mice display on some machines? Some mice and some machines apple makes have an odd interaction where your click occurs a few ms after you press the mouse. It can be quite disturbing until you realize it and switch mice.

    Maybe you're talking about window resizing? I wouldn't blame the machine. I'd blame the app writers, but even above and beyond that, OSX is pretty much the only game in town doing live resizing, so it's hardly a fair comparison. Of course, you don't seem like one for fair comparisons.

    Intel probably disagrees. They've demo'd P4s at over 4Ghz. Heck, crazy overclockers have managed to get currently shipping machines over 4Ghz.

    With liquid cooling, in every example I've seen. Sorry, that just isn't going to work for the masses. It also tends to dramatically increase the cost of pre-built machines. Most people, like intel's sales department, don't consider this a "success".

    The PC Mag article indicates the Xeon machine is faster at 10 out of 12 Photoshop tasks, and faster overall on the Photoshop benchmark by a bit under 30%.

    Umm.. no. Looking at the results and then quoting the article:

    At these larger image sizes, although the Wintel test times were quite good, both the G4 and G5 computers proved more adept at distort functions like wave and pinch. Moreover, on the Windows system, loading the controls often took a minute or more. If these times are added back to the actual test times, both Macintosh computers would have clearly outperformed the Windows-based computer.

    In other words, they snipped off some time! The G5 had to load the controls to finish the operation and return to normal status. The P4 didn't. Probably, they snipped off some time because it's PC mag, I am not very surprised or very upset. At least they mentioned it in the article.

    Let's ignore that for a second or two. I'll say again: there is NO OPTIMIZED OS OR OPTIMIZING COMPILER FOR OSX . So the fact that in general the G5 comes up mighty close to being even after the time-snipping, means it's much faster.

    Now, I can't profess to know the software you're using, the size of your inbox or the web pages you browse, but they must be pretty damn impressive if you consider web browsing and email checking to be "processor and memory intensive tasks".

    Hmm. I use IMAP. I get a pretty low amount of personal mail and I'm subscribed to Ruby-Talk, which I keep a 1 month archive on. This means I have about 7k-10k messages at any given point.

    Indexing those for content is not a trivial task.

    Right now I have about 50 tabs open spread over 4 Firebird windows, 5 IE windows, Outlook checking 6 email accounts every 2 minutes, a VMWare machine idling away in the background, MP3s playing, 6 Word documents open, 4 IM windows, 15 terminal windows and about 30G of data being...

    Bullshit. But go on.

    This machine is a 1.8Ghz Pentium 4. It's somewhat restricted by only 512MB of RAM, but nevertheless I never feel the need for a faster CPU while using it. More memory ? Yes. Faster hard disks ? Yes. Faster C

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  86. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    Right now I have about 50 tabs open spread over 4 Firebird windows, 5 IE windows, Outlook checking 6 email accounts every 2 minutes, a VMWare machine idling away in the background, MP3s playing, 6 Word documents open, 4 IM windows, 15 terminal windows and about 30G of data being...

    Bullshit. But go on.

    See, this is the point at which I lose interest in anything you have - or had - to say. Pretentious, snotty and condescending tones I can excuse as immaturity. But a personal attack - and a direct insult to boot - is where your credibility evaporates.

  87. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by Paradox · · Score: 1

    You lost yours the moment you began arguing both sides of the same argument. One for Opteron (set up for SMP, which incedently means set up for context switching and context sharing) and another for G5 (implication that P4's context switching is not slow compared to G5, which is also very optimized for SMP).

    Among other things. Like, "I don't own a P4, but I'm bragging about the one I'm using right now."

    Sorry, I just don't have the time to play games with people like you. I'll condecend when it sounds like you deserve it. And you, my poor comrade, seem to yearn for it.

    I won't claim to understand why so many people on slashdot are so eager to make arguments so patently false. For a moment I thought you were actually saying something and began to respond.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  88. Re:Now now, that kind of fast-talk won't work on m by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    You lost yours the moment you began arguing both sides of the same argument. One for Opteron (set up for SMP, which incedently means set up for context switching and context sharing) and another for G5 (implication that P4's context switching is not slow compared to G5, which is also very optimized for SMP).

    No, I didn't. I merely asked you to explain the conclusion you were drawing and the data you were drawing from.

    Among other things. Like, "I don't own a P4, but I'm bragging about the one I'm using right now."

    Firstly, I wasn't bragging - merely giving statements of fact. If I was bragging, I would have spouted some hyperbole that was only barely feasible.

    Secondly, you couldn't think of a single way that I might be regularly using a machine I don't own and _that_ was your first conclusion ?

    Sorry, I just don't have the time to play games with people like you.

    The irony !

    I don't particularly care for people like you who call me a liar for no other reason than they don't like the sound of what I'm saying.

    I'll condecend when it sounds like you deserve it.

    And, naturally, being civil and raising valid points is a sure indicator, right ?

    Your posts were dripping with condescension from the get-go.

    I won't claim to understand why so many people on slashdot are so eager to make arguments so patently false. For a moment I thought you were actually saying something and began to respond.

    My thoughts exactly. Then I considered your assertions that web browsing and checking email were processor intensive tasks, that application startup times were meaningful indicators of CPU performance and that just because a CPU did things faster, didn't actually mean it was faster. *Then* I read the insults and realised your mind was made up, you wouldn't believe anything I said - regardless - and any further attempts at discussing the topics were a waste of time.

  89. Re:I HATE MAC'S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mooooove!