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Apple's Dual 2GHz By The Numbers

mallumax writes "ComputerWorld has an exciting review of Apple's Dual 2GHz machine." An excerpt: "It's clear from two weeks of testing that Apple's new Power Mac G5 dual 2-GHz machine is the fastest thing the company has ever produced. And while you can debate benchmarks until eternity, it certainly appears poised to meet or beat anything now out on the Windows side."

51 of 776 comments (clear)

  1. yesss... by potpie · · Score: 4, Funny

    come to the other side of computing... join us... don't be afraid!

    --
    Esoteric reference.
    1. Re:yesss... by jerkychew · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's not me that's afraid. It's my wallet.

  2. My tests by tcd004 · · Score: 3, Funny

    The G5 is great, but it doesn't hold a candle to my Powerstack 5000.

    Maybe because it's processor is based on this bad boy.

    Tcd004

  3. hmm... by ILoveMyGeeky1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    "it certainly appears poised to meet or beat anything now out on the Windows side."

    Doesn't anything somewhat stable meet or beat anything running windows?

    --
    -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-
    Yea! Go Tux! He's just so dead Tuxy.
  4. "you can debate benchmarks until eternity" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    and i'm sure slashdot intends to.

    So, to what productive end do we expect this particular slashdot thread, perhaps the third or fourth on the subject of the G5's supposed speed, to go?

  5. G5 Rules by thedillybar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    After seeing benchmarks for the G5, I'm actually considering switching to Mac, which I once thought to be a mortal sin (or is it still?).

    I certainly can't think of a better desktop machine that the majority of people are familiar with and yet kicks out that kind of performance. Then again, why should I care if anyone else can figure out how to use my machine?

    1. Re:G5 Rules by robbieduncan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Whilst Apple will not have a "new" CPU in 6 months, i.e. they will not have a G6 they will have a 3Ghz G5 by summer next year (as was announced at the introduction of the G5).

      Is this good enough for you?

  6. News flash! by dtfinch · · Score: 4, Funny

    New processor is faster than its predecessor.

    1. Re:News flash! by Duckman5 · · Score: 3, Informative

      What would seem to be simple logic isn't always the case. If you will direct your attention here, you will discover that, depending on the task, an early Pentium 4-M could actually be outperformed by the higher end Pentium 3-M of the time.

  7. Yes, yes. What of it? by Latent+IT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And while you can debate benchmarks until eternity, it certainly appears poised to meet or beat anything now out on the Windows side.

    Well, uh... what?

    I mean, maybe I'm just "debating benchmarks" here, but how do you pull the above statement out of the linked article?

    On the G5, Photoshop launched in 8 seconds, and relaunched in 4. Yes, 4. On the Dual G4, it launched in 24 seconds, and relaunched in 12.5. And on the Powerbook, Photoshop was ready to go in 25 seconds the first time around, and in 17 seconds on relaunch.

    Yes, but what of it? This has nothing to do with Windows, Windows Desktops, or even anything non-apple. It compares the G5 to other, older Apple products. Unsurprisingly, the *new* Apple product beats the *old* Apple product. And clicking a stopwatch, and measuring how long launching a program takes, or how long a reboot lasts isn't that much of a "benchmark".

    And, just to give you an idea of the technical competence of the reviewer who wrote the article, check out this snippit:

    One final note: I whined in my first review about the G5's weak Airport wireless signal. Several readers promptly (and pointedly) wrote to ask if I'd installed the Apple-supplied external Airport antenna. I had not.

    I'm sorry. The article is lousy, and the clown who submitted this article to /. clearly has an agenda to push. Why waste our time like this?

  8. Benchmarks with 8GB Ram by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why hasn't someone benchmarked this? Or at least why would apple not publicize this one? I would think apple could use a benchmark with very large datasets that would show the G5 with 8GB Ram and a Dual Xeon with 8GB Ram(using PAE). The G5 would clearly kick the $#!t out of the Xeon in this case.

    The fact that the G5 can handle more ram without resorting to the PAE b.s., is a clear advantage and I think Apple should market that a little better.

  9. Use the best tool for the job by charnov · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I got the chance to play with the mid-model (single 1.8 GHz) G5 and it is VERY fast compared to the older models (roughly about the same if not faster than the previous top model). The owner of said machine (a video editor) uses it as a front end for some of his editing work mainly because he wanted a Mac to use for the interface. The back end is comprised of two large SGI's and dozens of linux boxes (all AMDs).

    The best tool for the job. My hats off to Apple for a great machine.

    --
    [RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
  10. Fastest thing ever? by gilesjuk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course it's the fastest ever, CPU speeds are increasing all the time. If I go out and buy a new AMD CPU it'll be the fastest ever....for about 2-3 months.

    Plus there's the "it beats anything on the PC market", erm quad CPU Xenon? it's a PC ain't it? where do you want to draw the line?

    Macs are cool but speed doesn't convice people to buy a computer, the price often does. Mac users were once ridiculed for knowing very little about computers, however I think this isn't true these days. Mac users know enough about computers to be able to choose between a computer running Windows and a Mac.

    1. Re: Fastest thing ever? by gidds · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Macs are cool but speed doesn't convice people to buy a computer

      For a long time, many people have been citing the relative lack of speed as a reason not to get a Mac. In some cases, that may have been a genuine reason, in which case this speed increase would persuade such people to get a Mac.

      In other cases, I suspect that speed is merely an excuse used by people who have other reasons (conscious or not) for avoiding Macs; this excuse is now no longer valid, and those people will need to either find a better excuse, examine their real reasons, or reassess their preferences.

      It's interesting to see how many reasons/excuses have been pretty much crossed off in recent years: 'Apple's dying', 'The OS isn't up to it', 'It's not compatible with Unix &c.', 'There's no software', 'It's not compatible with XYZ piece of hardware', and 'It's not fast enough' are now non-issues for many (most?) people. Of course, there are still some genuine concerns amongst those, but I suspect that more people dismiss Macs through ignorance, crowd-following, or inertia than from genuine need.

      --

      Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

  11. People miss the point by emerrill · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is they type of thing that shouldn't make front page. Its good for the apple section but not front page. It is only a good article for apple users (which I am). But then you get all these ppl saying 'so what' which if you aren't a apple user, is true. This article doesn't give hard benchmarks, and specifically says that. So when ppl come in here and say my xxx boots quicker then that, all I have to say is, So what? This isn't meant to compare different platforms, just Macs.

  12. So far by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I've had one for a few days now. Extraordinarily responsive. I used a firewire cable to connect my powerbook to it via "target disk mode." I started a huge copy, like 30 GB or so. While this was going on I was able to continue use the computer as if nothing were happening. In fact I had to stop a few times and check the progress of the copy, because it seemed like it must have stopped or something. But there it was, chugging along.

    It's just fast fast fast.

  13. Re:benchmark against hyperthreaded CPU by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The first benchmarks released comparing the G5 to an Intel box had notes on this.

    The PC folks wailed and moaned because Hyperthreading was turned off on the Intel boxes when the benchmarks were performed but they neglected the footnote that mentioned that the PC actually performed worse on the benchmarks when HT was on, so to be fair they took the best score.

  14. Thanks for playing... by phillymjs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...but real-world app tests have shown that the dual 2GHz G5 beats Dell's cheapest dual 3.06GHz Xeon sytem, both in performance and (when configured identically as possible to Apple's base 2GHz dualie) in price.

    In fact, Dell's current price ($4372) on the comparison machine has gone up by $600 since late June, the first time I configured one-- but even back then, Apple beat them by hundreds of dollars.

    And don't bother playing the "I can build it cheaper" card-- you cannot fairly compare a manufactured system with one that you cobbled together with the cheapest parts you could find.

    ~Philly

  15. Mars or Bust by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Informative

    What a disappointing article. His "speed" tests consisted of the ridiculously unscientific "boot time" test and application launch tests. Lopped on top of that were hand crafted Photoshop and Bryce "tests" which verify that the dual G5 kicks the crap out of the 17" G4 and 1.25GHz PowerMac. My 12" Powerbook is faster than the Lombard I bought in 1999. Yay.

    What about running real stuff like FCP's Compressor or Maya's mental ray renderer plug-in? Maybe even a After Effects render speed. Using iMovie to test anything isn't very fair to the people who would buy a G5. They're not using iMovie to work on SD video. Photoshop users aren't using a bunch of filters picked at random.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  16. Obligatory reality check. by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Before we all freak out - once again - about the comparisons of G5 vs. whatever, may I offer a suggestion:

    Let's all take a nice deep breath, and remember that this is simply yet another offering, in a huge selection of products; that these products are different in many ways, for many people; that purchasing one or more of these products is not indicative of your mental health, penis size, sexual orientation, or anything else... okey?

    G5 fast, mmm, nice G5. Athlon also fast, mmm, nice Athlon. I want both, for different reasons. They are not mutually exclusive.

    (As for all the 'so fuckin' what' posts; this is Slashdot. No one made you click More.)

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
  17. what I like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...is all the Mac haters who used to say "yeah, the Mac is cool, but I need something a little faster than 1GHz, like my IntelAMDAthlonXP 5500MHz box. You should see how FAST Explorer pops up on that puppy!!!1111"

    Now that Apple has a arguably *fast* machine, they've switched back to complaining about the price.

    I guess those folks just go between price, speed, and the number of mouse buttons, in circles.

    I think the Macs are great machines and reasonably priced. My 500MHz iMac is perfectly usable and sits aside my 1.8GHz P4 Linux box with pride. The iMac cost me $1300 and the P4 cost around $1400 (I bought all quality components like Intel mobo, Antec case, 1GB Crucial RAM, etc), and it was purchased about 2 years after I got the iMac, and didn't even come with a monitor, so I think the iMac was a good deal. *shrug*

    I don't know or care precisely how fast the G5s are. I just know they are fast, well-designed machines with a beautiful operating system and tools (have any of you ever written a program using the apple devel tools? I had a harder time taking a shit this morning!!) and they are worth the few hunder dollar premium.

  18. Upgrade treadmill - is it slowing down? by silverhalide · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Food for thought:
    Back in the 386 and 486 days, I was in the 18-month upgrade cycle, simply cause my comp couldn't run the latest and greatest apps. Now, I am currently using a computer from 1999 - a p3-500. And, I have no immediate plans on upgrading. I consider myself among the power users -- graphic design, MSOffice, many programming suites, even an occasional game. And ya know what? It all works like a champ. Tell me, what's the reason for upgrading? So Photoshop loads in 4 seconds and not 20? Obviously, a new system would be NICE, but I don't really NEED it like we used to (new version of windows wouldn't run, office would crash, etc).

    Before you answer with "To play games!" Please note that you can buy a brand spanky new Gamecube for $99 now. I will never play games on my PC again at that price!

    Obviously this also doesn't apply to video editting as that needs every drop of power you can get it.

  19. You just don't get it. by CountBrass · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reading some of the comments I've come to the conclusion that they just don't get it.

    Despite the review, the point of a Mac is not the horsepower (and comparing completely different CPUs using gigahertz is just stupid).

    The point is: Macs and OSX just work and they're beautiful! If you don't value quality then you won't value a Mac.

    But please, don't bore the rest of us with your attempts to justify sticking with an inferior product.

    "Yeah my Ford Ka is just as good as any Ferrari - it can do the same speed in town AND does more miles to the gallon! That means my Ka is better than a Ferrari!".

    The difference is at least the Ka owner pays a lot less for his car. The pee cee users PAY THE SAME PRICE and get an inferior product ! Got to love Michael Dell and Bill Gates. And people say Apple is great marketing company.

    Edward

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  20. Wow, you redefine "ignorant." by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Informative

    Half Life 2? Way to try to bolster your agrument by including a game that's not even out for Windows machines yet.

    RTCW? Yup.

    C&C Generals? Yup, coming soon.

    Halo? Yup, soon.

    Sim City 4? Yup.

    Civ III? Yup.

    In conclusion, you need to take a break from the gaming and check your facts before you post. Otherwise you come off looking like a dumb shit when someone like me comes along to easily prove you wrong.

    ~Philly

  21. Re:The question is then by tulare · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Hmm. I think you are missing just about every possible point here. I'll try to hit some of them without trolling.

    First of all, you've got the people who do media editing... sound/video/still... They are going to continue to shell out the big bucks for the best Apple hardware because it will continue to put them in a competitive advantage over their collegues who need to spend more time every day waiting for numbers to crunch. In the case of this market, the dual G5 will pay for itself quickly, on speed alone.
    Then there's the sciences, which if you'd read the article is one of the very things being tested on this monster. I've got a friend who works in bioinformatics, and I can't wait to tell him that BLAST is being compiled for the dual G5. He will curse me as he picks up the phone to call Apple =]
    Finally, there's this myth of incompatibility... for your average desktop luser, what applications are important to run? Well, hello, we have the Suite of the Beast, which runs natively, and rather well, on OS X... Exchange connectivity included, thank you very much. What else? Oh, you mean something that doesn't already exist on the unix side and has been ported by the Fink project? Hello? Are you still there?

    I was helping a frind of mine to try to save his win98 box from an inevitable wipe-and-reinstall, and I asked him how he liked OS X on his dual-G4. This guy used to flip front-panel switches on PDP-8s for a living (but only when the tape reader was shredding paper), and hasn't left the industry since... I regularly pick his brain on "bigger-picture" type issues, and his ignorance of how to keep his teenaged children from b0rking win98 configs notwithstanding, he really knows his s**t. His reply about OS X:
    ...what I've always thought a computer ought to be like.
    So true. I use and enjoy Linux on my peecee, and have no intention of leaving it behind as an OS - it's still much too useful for me for lots of things - but I have to say, Apple has done a fantastic job with OS X. It is fantastically easy to teach n00bs on, and I have found it to be superb for administering a very heterogenous network consisting of various windoze clients and servers, Apple machines from ][e to current models, and various *nix servers and a few clients... best of all, I can do all this with tools native to OS X - I've got the windoze Remote Desktop Connection, Apple Remote Desktop, and X11 or even Terminal.app for the real work =]

    I don't want to sound like a cheerleader, although I admit I've probably done just that. It's just that when you find a really useful tool to get your job done, it's hard not to wax enthusiastic.
    --
    political_news.c: warning: comparison is always true due to limited range of data type
  22. Re:Price / Performance by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I looked at the AMD Opteron Alienware box for digital video editing and set all the settings as close as I could to a mid range G5 (the AMD doesn't come in dual cpu config, so I selected the 1.8Ghz AMD and compared it to the 1.8Ghz Apple):

    Apple Box:
    18.Ghz G5
    1Gb DDR ram
    160Gb S-ATA drive
    Superdrive (DVD-RW. CD-RW, CDR etc)
    GeForce FX 5200 64Mb
    Gigbait ethernet
    3x Firewire (1x 800, 2x 400)
    USB 2.0
    SP-DIF optical inputs and outputs

    Alienware box:
    AMD Opteron 64bit 1.8Ghz
    1Gb DDR ram
    160Gb S-ATA drive
    DVD, CD-RW combo (note, no DVD burning capability)
    Nvidia Quadro FX 128Mb
    Sound Blaster Audigy 2

    Prices:
    Apple 1.8Ghz: $2,649
    AMD Opteron 1.8Ghz: $3,101

    This was as close as I could get the specs without digging around too much and I think it's pretty fair. I could add the ATI Radeon 9800 Pro to try and get closer to the Quadro in the AMD box to add an extra $350 to the price - still comes in slightly less than the AMD.

  23. Where the dual processors come in handy by ducomputergeek · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Apple caters to a Niche market folks. Most mac users could give a flying leap about the frame rate of Quake or other such applications. If they are playing Quake, maybe its for a little fun. Mac caters now to two types of end users. 1) Graphics & Video, 2) Unix developers.

    I know of more people in the last year to 18 months that abandoned Linux as their desktop for OSX. I am one of those because at the end of the day, I like Photoshop much better than GIMP, and the ablity to develop PHP/MySQL apps on my iBook and still have powerpoint is exactly what I need.

    I do come from a video/graphics systems admin background. I worked during college part-time at a friend's father's architecture firm where they had a small 24 unit ALPHA rendering farm.

    Now I do indy technology consulting, mainly to small businesses and video firms. I had a number of clients switch to PC's (Dell's mainly) in the last two years because the hardware costs were so much less, however they quickly found out that programs like Premeire suddenly crashed a lot more and the time in lost work was far greater than what it would have cost for a mac. ALthough this was mainly due to Adobe Premeire 6 generally being a piece of junk, not really windows itself.

    I have one customer that is going to order the dual G5 after 10.3 is shipping. He is semi-retired, but does some commercial and wedding video work. He has a six year old G3 400 with 1GB of ram to run Final Cut Pro and he has upgraded X.2 and some of his rendering output times are 6 hours. No big deal to him, clicks render, goes out the back of his house onto his boat and goes fishing the rest of the day. Well, the local apple store was flying a specialist from apple over FCP and DVD studio pro and we were in the store and had my client's last video, which took about 4.5 hours to render. We imported the file from a DVD onto the new G5 with an enhanced version of FCP and then on a single 1.8Ghz G5 and the difference was about 15% for the same footage in favor of the dual compared to the single G5 and about 1/3d of the time that it took on his G3.

    Granted configured with a new 23" HD and 17" flatpanel, the dual box is about $15,000 with all the software he needs as well. Add in about another $3000 for upgrades over the next 5 years in software and and the new box he will be buying is cheaper that his old G3.

    Now granted, in video production, you can spend $20k on a mac and it will do just about anything you want, or you can jump and spend $250k on an Avid. Even dedicated editing boxes are $3500, so this industry will & must spend the money and for many graphic/video firms, that 15% difference means 15% more money because they can turn around and start the next job that much faster. Couple the increase in turn around with the prices some of these firms charge, that can pay for a couple dual G5's real quick.

    Then finally, there is TCO. Most small wedding video/indy video companies I know of tend to hang on to their equipment for a long time. I know a lot of people that purchased G3's and still are using them because they knew a year ago that the G5's were going to be out, so they decided to wait. Some have already purchased the G5's and have been extremely pleased with their purchase and the dramatic increases in speed. Another video company in town switched from their Casablance/Kron editing tools to FCP on G5's and after about a month, their turn around times for videos has gone from about 14 days to 7 or 8. Many of their editors are full time college students and FCP is what is being taught in the classrooms, so the cost of time in retraining was extremely low. Now they purchased Single 1.8Ghz boxes with 2GB of Ram, but it seems to be more than enough for them.

    So will the average "user" need dual processors...um, no, but there are those out there were it such high end specs can be usefull and profitable.

    I have to admit that I was not a fan of Apple until a year ago and bought this iBook. The main reason why I switched was I wanted something that worked and thus far everything has worked perfectly and I have no complaints.

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  24. Re:When the cows come home by wavedeform · · Score: 5, Informative
    Is it just me, or does Apple hardware seem outrageously expensive?

    It's not just you, it's everyone who hasn't done their homework.
    For more or less equivalent dual processor systems I get:
    Dell - $4,763.00
    Apple - $3,623.00

    Note that the Apple price does not include the $50 or less you would have to spend on a mouse to keep you happy.

  25. Re:So much for meeting and beating... by NickV · · Score: 4, Informative

    Holy shit, your "laptop" weighs 12 pounds and is 2 inches thick!!!!

    That's not a freaking laptop! It's a freaking desktop, LITERALLY! No wonder the weight/size specs are buried 3 pages deep way down in a chart here.

    There is NO MENTION of battery life. What does it get? 15 minutes?

    Meanwhile the powerbook 15" weighs less than 6 pounds, and is an inch thick.

    Do you walk with your laptop?

  26. Congrats! You are no longer using CaveOS! by Cordath · · Score: 3, Funny

    Let me guess... You just upgraded to a G5 running BSD-based OS X from an older mac running an older version of MacOS. Congradulations! You are now using a mordern operating system capable of basic multi-tasking!

    Just don't ask how long Linux or even Microsoft users have been able to do the same thing. It will probably depress you.

  27. Re:It is not enough by Durandal64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Translation: "Macs don't have many games." Unfortunately for you, there are entire markets of software that (get ready for this) have no entertainment value whatsoever! What essential commercial software out there is completely unavailable for and has no open-source alternatives for the Mac? Macs have Office and plenty of software that can run under the X11 environment. In reality, there is very little Windows software out there that either isn't available for the Mac or does not have some sort of Mac equivalent.

  28. Re:what suck is... by RdsArts · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's nice to have so much processing power but unless there's plenty of software the mac will be limited to running a specific function such as movie editing or photoshop

    Which is basically what this would be best at.

    I mean, really, do you need a dual G5 to launch Mozilla?

    Well... I mean other than the 1.4 branch. ;)

    If your video editing, you most likely want only three things: power, power, and more coffee. This appears to provide at least two of those.

    Now, if your going to complain about the "lack of software" for doing AV work on a mac, I'm honestly going to have to ask what drugs you've done today: that's pretty much been their main market since time began.

  29. You are soooooooo right! by mariox19 · · Score: 5, Funny

    You're so right, because there's just no way for you to download thousands of UNIX utilities and run configure, make, and make install, and have it run on OS X.

    And aside from the command line, there just aren't any software products, just as you say. Basically, with Macintosh, you get a word process, e-mail client, browser, and that's it!

    And there's really no hope of that ever changing, what with the crappy, hard-to-use development enviroment Apple has released for their platform, and the total indiffernce from the developer community regarding the platform.

    It's a wonder more people don't share the "insight" you do.

    Thanks for the enlightenment!

    --

    quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

  30. Re:So much for meeting and beating... by davesag · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Reading all this just made me think for a sec. what is it about my macs that I reallly like. Well today's winning answer is this. It's not startup times (< 1 second on my laptops), it's not ram (1Gb on my tibook) it's not the overall speed etc etc it's this:

    In our house we have 3 laptops, I have a tibook, my girlfriend a 12"G4 and sometime ago I retired the g3 laptop to inhouse server status. It is connected to the stereo and since it is pre-firewire is connected to a great big external drive via USB. we both have itunes running. my gf likes music i'd never allow on my laptop and i have music she will never want. she's in the back room writing an essay but using rendesvous has access to all the music on my mac, all the music on the stereo and her own music. she's no nerd, and the music sharing abilities of itunes are simply transparent. right now, just taking a look, she's playing music off my laptop but is out my my earshot. I am listening to music off the home stereo that is also coming off my laptop. there is nothing to configure, nothing to confuse a non-techy person, it all just works.

    meanwhile every night at around 3am some shell scripts run thanks to cron that use ssh and rsync to backup mine and my gf's work to the g3, into our own account spaces on the stereo. when our local backups are done the stereo in turn backs up changes to a mate's server in holland. his server? an even older g3 laptop than mine. i have admin rights and the osx server admin tools are simply awesome. he's running a cvs server which i use with a bunch of our mates to share code. ican admin that from here with a lovely gui. yeah i know you can so all that nerdy stuff on *nix or windows, or at least I assume you can on windows, but the convenience of having it all look and feel consistant is just gold to me.

    later this year i'll buy a new 15" powerbook and the tibook will hit the hi-fi rack. it's running mysql and tomcat and so forth so will become both a music server, dvd burning station and staging server for my clients.

    and what's more it all synchs with my new cell phone and my ipod. lordy lordy i love my macs.

    --
    I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
  31. Other side of computing: Linux running on G5 by reporter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The article states the following.
    It's clear from two weeks of testing that Apple's new Power Mac G5 dual 2-GHz machine is the fastest thing the company has ever produced.

    The new G5 from Apple is more than merely "fast". It is a workstation in its own right. In "Byte of the Apple", "Businessweek" notes that the new Macintoshes are, in fact, UNIX workstations. The notebooks based on G5s are, in fact, portable UNIX workstations.

    Steve Jobs, if he had any sense, would be marketing these machines as workstations instead of mere personal computers. With 64-bit processors, these machines are fully capable of handling engineering workloads like Verilog, HSPICE, fluid-dynamics simulation, etc.

    Right now, a tidal wave of Linux-on-x86 machines is drowning Sun Microsystems in the workstation market. It sure would be nice to see a G5 take some market share bled from Sun Microsystems. In fact, it would be ideal to see a Linux-driven G5 take market share.

    ... from the desk of the reporter

  32. Scope of price differentials by benwaggoner · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm always startled to see people getting excited about three-digit price differences between base machines for things meant for the video market.

    I'm building a HD editing/compression system. When you add in storage, displays, audio, etcetera, even a cheap setup makes a $500 difference pretty tiny.

    For my needs, I'm shaving THOUSANDS off by going Mac. Why? Xserve RAID. I can get 2.5 TB for about $12K, that's fast enough for 1920x1080i60 at 10-bit uncompressed capture. I haven't been able to find anything that's close to that price performance on Windows.

    This is an edge case, granted. But for anyone who bills by the hour, a few hundred bucks in a system that's going to be making you money for a couple of years is nothing - like a quarter a day. Downtime for one tech support incident could eat up the entire differential.

  33. Re:Translation: macs don't have much software by cosmo7 · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, in reality the vast majority of PC software has no Mac equivalent.

    This is true. I tried to get "Windows XP Tutor" from the Video Professor guy who's on TV all the time and they don't have it for Mac.

    I bet all their other super high-quality software is PC-only too.

  34. Re:Congrats! You are no longer using CaveOS! by seann · · Score: 3, Informative

    true story though..
    I got a 1.3ghz, running windows xp
    when I copy over the network from my pb12"
    the winxp computer slows like a dog.
    7200rpm maxtor in the xp
    5200 rpm whatever in the 12".

    --
    I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
  35. Re:The question is then by timeOday · · Score: 3, Flamebait
    Is pure speed enough? What factors are most important to "real" consumers?
    Noise!

    I have a nice, new dual G4 powermac sitting in my office with a nice cinerama display, and it never gets used. It's just too loud.

  36. Re:Congrats! You are no longer using CaveOS! by GrayArea · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't know about you but Windows XP consistently gets sluggish when copying large amounts of data (>5GB) on my Dell Inspiron 8100. I do agree though that OS has a bigger impact than the hardware for being responsive. In fact, my iMac 17" at home running OS X is much more responsive than Windows XP is on faster hardware. Just goes to show you how much Windows sucks, but we knew that already...

    --
    "The deluded are always filled with absolutes. The rest of us have to live with ambiguity." - Aristoi, Walter Jon Willia
  37. Re:The question is then by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Informative

    4. OS X is not Unix.

    Regarding its bloodline, it's more Unix than Linux is being that it is BSD based.

    Just because an OS is easy to use, doesn't mean it isn't Unix based.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  38. Re:The question is then by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "1. It's the fastest most powerful desktop computer in the world."

    According to whom? The only benchmarks I've seen are from PC Magazine (not that reliable) and Apple. PC Magazine gave it a mediocre evaluation, and, Apple, well, it's their product.

    Apple's SPEC scores don't impress me. When they start showing me numbers in the 1400s, I'll agree. Unfortunately, all that they have released are the GCC numbers which makes comparison with other computers difficult. Am I to trust that Apple's numbers for the Dell system aren't biased at all? What about Athlon 64?

    SPEC works because companies compete to optimize their platform (compilers, operating system, and software) to produce the best results. There are regulations that the company must follow; these are voted upon by SPEC members. Apple has not submitted results to SPEC, nor are they benchmarking their platform with the best compiler. And if GCC is the best compiler for the G5, then they have a bigger problem.

    "2. It's certainly the most usable and stable."

    Also debatable. "Usable" depends on what you're used to. I have not seen usability studies involving XP vs. OS X. Is your "most usable" base on actual data or is it just your personal opinion?

    "Stable" depends on what kind of configuration you're running, as well as a number of other factors. Windows can be surprisingly stable; many Windows systems have been up for years. Of course, if you install every spyware ridden screen saver, Windows will likely be unstable, but that's not Microsoft's fault. Is your "Stable" claim based on actual data, or is it another opinion?

    "3. It has the beautiful Aqua UI."

    I could debate this (beauty is in the eye of the beholder), but I won't. I like Aqua too. However, after a few months, most people stop caring.

    "4. It's a superb Unix workstation."

    So is Linux. Or Windows with Cygwin.

    "5. It comes in a gorgeous aluminium case."

    There are plenty of great looking aluminum ATX cases. The G5 "cheese grater" case is a little gaudy for my tastes, but, again, this is preference.

    So, let's see:

    1: Is it the fastest? We don't know. Show me some impressive SPEC numbers and we'll talk.

    2: Is it the most usable and stable? Show me some studies that say so. Your opinion means little to me.

    3: Aqua does look cool. But that's a preference, not a fact.

    4: PC's with Linux make great UNIX workstations too.

    5: There are plenty of cool looking aluminum PC cases.

  39. Re:The question is then by oingoboingo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    2. It's certainly the most usable and stable.

    I'd love to agree with you there, but my new 1.6GHz G5 has been incredibly unstable since the day it arrived. It will freeze up hard doing just about anything. I went through about 2 hours of troubleshooting over the phone with Apple Australia, and in the end the only thing they could recommend was that I box it up and send it back to them.

    If you check the user discussion forums on Apple's support site, there are lots of people having problems with their new G5s freezing and kernel panicking. Some of this is due to a firmware bug that causes 3rd party RAM to wreak havoc, but a lot of it also appears to be related to USB hubs and various USB devices causing kernel panics.

    Don't get me wrong...I love the idea of the G5 (which is why I bought one), but for me at least, it's been the least stable piece of computing equipment I've ever owned or used (and this is going back to Apple IIs and Microbees (for the Aussies out there)).

    I think Apple may still have a lot of production difficulties to sort out...I think a lot of us have been stung by the infamous 'Don't buy a Revision A Apple product' syndrome.

    Of course, even with the G5 sitting there completely frozen on my desk at work, waiting to get off hold with Apple tech support, there was a non-stop stream by passers-by coming into my office to admire the system case and have the requisite demonstration of the side panel coming off, revealing the shiny (crashed) goodness inside.

    Hopefully one day I'll get a 1.6GHz G5 that works!

  40. Re:Other side of computing: Linux running on G5 by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was just saying the other day how much my G5 notebook was like a portable Unix workstation. It's not as cool as my G6 notebook, though. I think of that as my portable TIME MACHINE.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  41. Re:Other side of computing: Linux running on G5 by rmayes100 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is from what I understand Mac OS X hasn't been compiled or optimized for 64 bits, it is still running in 32 bit mode. This is why Jobs has the sense to not market these as 64-bit workstations. There's no doubt that these are fast machines and great computers but until the software running on them actually takes advantage of the 64 bit processor these are no different than running Windows or Linux on the new Athlon64 in 32 bit mode (granted you can run Linux in 64-bit mode now and MS has some betas out than run in 64-bit mode as well but you could also run the 32-bit versions of both if you wanted).

  42. Re:The question is then by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 5, Funny

    You could say that while Linux is the "Unix workalike," OS X is the "Unix workaround."

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  43. Apple merging with SGI or Sun by swb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Steve Jobs, if he had any sense, would be marketing these machines as workstations instead of mere personal computers.

    There's loads of reasons why it won't happen, but I always thought that Apple should have bought SGI.

    It'd be a huge engineering task, but having a consistant Unix with a good UI from laptop, to desktop, to machine room would be excellent, and SGI would give Apple the entree to research/corporate data centers they lack now, as well as some industrial-strength computing power they don't have now. This would give Apple a huge unified market in visualization.

    The time for this would have been a couple of years ago when OS X was being developed so that it could have been developed for both platforms (and stuff from SGI merged into OS X). It's probably too late for it to be meaningful now.

    The other option would be a merger/takeover by Sun. It's a poorer fit, though, as Sun is more datacenter/DB than visualization, but it would give Sun the ability to market a complete alternative solution to MS, including a really good end-user desktop.

    Whenever I posit this, most people say "Apple's doesn't want to be a business/corporate platform". This may be true, but long-term its easier to see Apple's CPU development being less dependent on the good graces of a third party as well as having more compelling high-end computing driving their CPU development.

    There's also nothing that says Apple should stop their consumer/botique marketing or market niche -- it would be important to a $UNIX+Apple company to keep the consumer/end user desktop viable, and staying in that market makes that happen.

    It'd be good for "big Unix" as well, since Sun and SGI can't offer the lower end of the spectrum to the customers and end up bouncing off of MS-centric operations at a lot of places. With a total package that extended a viable, well-known platform to the desktop, their server offerings would get a better advantage, as well as giving them better lower end server offerings in Xserve variants.

  44. Re:The question is then by valmont · · Score: 4, Insightful

    heh you wanna know stable? how about X11 + Gnome + Gimp for image authoring, + 6 different web browsers for cross-browser checking of DHTML functionality, + office apps such as word and excel to deal with requirements documents sent by management drones, Multi-IM chat client to stay connected with co-workers over AIM, and Jabber over SSL, iTunes mp3 player in the background to soothe the mind playing music from a firewire-connected iPod, BBEdit code editor and 10 terminal windows, one of which running Tomcat java servlet container, another one running ant build scripts, to work on various components of a J2EE-compliant web application, all this and a few other apps running and being actively used simultanously on a 400mhz Titanium powerbook bought in early 2001, recently upgraded to 1Gig of RAM for $180 including priority shipping courtesy of pricewatch.com.

    How many times have i ever crashed the machine, and have had to reboot due to a crash? well, TWICE, when i got kernel panics when fiddling with some obscure features of CUPS printer sharing over SMB. But never while performing the typical daily load outlined above on this machine.

    I only reboot my laptop once a week as a preventive measure to give the OS a chance to perform a periodic fsck whenever it feels it needs to do so. My daily routine is heavy in network, peripherals, *and* disk I/O. Plenty of room for bad sectors to creep up on me.

    Go ahead, weep.

    Again, this is a 400mhz machine from 2001. It's old. and it still kicks ass.

    PC's with Linux do make great UNIX-ish workstations but not nearly anywhere near Mac OS X.

    Windows with Cygwin fucking sucks ass compared to OS X. I should know, prior to 2001 i used windows NT then windows 2000 on a DELL laptop. I used cygwin. I even wrote entire application development environment set-up scripts in bash under cygwin. It becomes a real bitch when you need to access executables that live in the "windows" world and get them to interoperate in the "cygwin world". cygpath. forward slashes vs backward slashes. stupid stupid stupid waste of time. Don't get me wrong, prior to OS X, Cygwin was a God-Send. It made windoz bearable to deal with.

    I have a debian linux server running at home on a cheap 2Ghz PC i inherited from my sister. I love Linux because thanks to Linux, no piece of computing hardware ever becomes truly obsolete. You can always turn any box into a cheap, decent desktop workstation, or a cheap, decent server.

    Windows NT and 2000 have wasted me countless hours of valuable time.

    In the end, to me, the best computing platform is Apple. The turning point was this pure beauty of an operating system that is Mac OS X.

    The revolution is now starting with Apple's new next-generation computing hardware architecture. Read here why I place such emphasis on overall system architecture. Hint: until dramatic architecture changes happen, wintel PCs really are stuck in a speed dead-end right now. Clocking your CPU chip upwards can only take you so far without melting your enclosing case or restricting your customer base to Alaska.

  45. Except for one thing... by ZxCv · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're comparing an OEM solution (the G5) to your homebrew setup. Of course you can buy more in parts when you're designing, building, and supporting it yourself. As has been shown several times in the past, the dual G5 system compares very closely in price to a dual Xeon system from Dell.

    --

    Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
  46. Re:The question is then by valmont · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Well okay, fair enuff. More specifics of things i can do EASILY with MacOSX and which I can't do on Linux:
    • laptops laptops laptops. Sure you can get linux workin quite well on a laptop. But OS X makes it dreamy: Check out OS X'S "network" control panel. It's hard to describe in words but it basically gives you great flexibility in switching between connectivity environments. You can define locations for all of OS X. But forget those for now. Stick to the automatic Location. the default one. No matter which connectivity is available at any given time, OS X will detect and use it: ethernet port, wireless 802.11b, bluetooth, modem, Infrared port. All those network ports are already pre-configured with priorities. You can define your own. In the end, it's beautiful: you're at work, connected via your ethernet port. you're ready to go home. close the laptop's lid. the laptop goes to sleep. you arrive home where you have an encrypted 802.11b network whose SSID is not being broadcast. you open your laptop's lid, OS X finds the wireless signal and associated authentication credentials based on settings, makes a DHCP request to your router, and bickity-bam within 5 seconds your email starts downloading in Mail.app. This all may sound trivial and stupid, but linux doesn't quite give you that on a laptop just yet. You'd need to mess with network configs and/or create some easy shell scripts. Still, not every convenient to your average usage, and still not as sexy as OS X to a power user.
    • iApps. Laugh all you want at Apple's iApps. They are quite fucking cool. OS X works with just about every digital device there is out there without installing A SINGLE PIECE of software. Why? for one Apple wrote drivers. But not just that. Apple has actively worked with digital device vendors to create standards to which their devices should adhere to, to be compatible with OS X. How can they do that? well, Apple has leverage. Examples? In 2001, i bought a Sony DSCP50 digital camera right after iPhoto came out. As a shot in the dark, i took a few pictures, then I plugged it in my laptop's USB port, it automatically launched iPhoto, and offered me an "import" button. After a few minutes arranging pictures into albums, i clicked the "online album" button and it created web pages on my .MAC account. It's silly really, but i love it. It's easy. It also lets me export the album to a website on my hard drive, which i can .tar.gz, upload somewhere and unpack. Another Example? Take any bluetooth mobile phone on the market. Namely my recently acquired Sony Ericsson t610. I plugged a bluetooth antenna dongle into my USB port, turned-on bluetooth on my cell phone, at which point the two devices started right away acknowledging one another, OS X told me the phone could be used over bluetooth to do internet dial-up and Synchronize address book and calendar information over iSync, and/or directly interact with my address book application
    • .
    • Which brings me to the next cool piece of technology: Apple iSync. That shit fucking rocks. In the PC world, whenever you buy a "device" and want to synchronize stuff with your PC, you are only stuck within the realm of that device's desktop software to make any kind of synchronization happen. Sync'ing ecclectic devices from various vendors requires you to purchase 3rd-party software and services such as intellisync. But again, here Apple worked closely with various device vendors to define a Sync'ing standard. Apple updated OS X, vendors updated their devices. As of this writing, my address book and calendar information are being sync'ed via iSync to my online .MAC account, my iPod and my sony ericsson t610. I could get me a few more.
    • Which brings me to put some focus on two interesting seemingly inconsequential little applications: Address Book and iCal. Those are two very simple, functional little applications. But they are more than just that.
  47. I own a 2ghz G5 by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I blew $3,000.

    Why?

    Because I really love the Apple operating system, and it's the best in the world, especially if you're a Unix geek who also likes doing arty stuff like video editing and compositing.

    Because I'm working on some projects requiring heavy compositing and special effects, and I really wanted to have the most powerful Mac I could find.

    Because the aesthetics of the Mac make me happy and make me enjoy work, and life, more. This is more important than one might think; considering all the time I spend in front of the screen, and the value of that time, it's well worth the bucks to get a computer I really like instead of one I don't.

    Hope that helps.

    D