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Apple iMac Pro Goes on Sale December 14th (engadget.com)

Apple vowed to ship the iMac Pro in December, and it's making good on that promise. From a report: The company has confirmed that its workstation-grade all-in-one will be available on December 14th. It has yet to reveal the exact configuration options, but the $4,999 'starter' model ships with an 8-core Xeon processor, 32GB of RAM, 1TB of solid-state storage and a Radeon Vega graphics chipset with 8GB of RAM. You can option it with up to an 18-core Xeon, 128GB of RAM, a 4TB SSD and a 16GB Vega chipset, although video creator Marques Brownlee notes that you'll have to wait until the new year for that 18-core beast.

9 of 278 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Hahahahaha by Sarten-X · · Score: 5, Informative

    Legally run OS X.

    For some folks, that's justification.

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  2. Re:Overpriced by Hawks · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to Apple's web site the iMac pro has:
    4xThunderbolt 3(USB-C), suppotring 2 additional 5K kmonitors
    1X10Gb ethernet (Nbase-T 1,2.5,5,10Gb support)
    4XUSB 3
    SDXC card slot
    and a mini-headphone jack

    --
    in anima Apparatus
  3. Re:Overpriced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Is it?

    Xeon W-2145 - $1113
    Cheapest LGA-2066 board available with 10Gb ethernet - $650
    32GB DDR4 - $400
    1TB 3.2GB/s PCIe SSD - $500
    Radeon Vega 56 - $600
    5k 27" monitor - $1300
    PSU, WiFi + Bluetooth card, wireless keyboard, wireless mouse, thunderbolt card, CPU cooler, case - ~$400

    Total - $4963

    Seems like it's pretty much in line with how much it would cost to build the same system yourself.

  4. Re:Good night by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, the CPU (Xeon W-2145) alone is more expensive than your 1/5th estimate for building it yourself.

    Here's a rough sketch of what you'd need to buy to match this system:
    Xeon W-2145 - $1113
    Cheapest LGA-2066 board available with 10Gb ethernet - $650
    32GB DDR4 - $400
    1TB 3.2GB/s PCIe SSD - $500
    Radeon Vega 56 - $600
    5k 27" monitor - $1300
    PSU, WiFi + Bluetooth card, wireless keyboard, wireless mouse, thunderbolt card, CPU cooler, case - ~$400

    Total - $4963

  5. Re: Hahahahaha by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here, let me help:

    A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or scientific applications.

    It's fun to call our Chromebooks a "workstation", but traditionally that's not remotely what it means.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  6. Re:Imagine by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Imagine spending $4999 on one of these

    I'm actually considering buying one...

    I like the 5K screen, and need a beefy machine to run something like DaVinci Resolve for video editing, color grading, etc....especially if I start working with 4K footage.

    I'm working on old hardware (MBP late 2011, with 16GB ram, SSD card replacement main drive, external thunderbolt work and cache drives)....and even with Photoshop, if I'm working with compositing several RAW files, I can bog my system down.

    So, no...you don't really need this if you're just doing email and browsing the web.

    I've priced out comparable HP and other systems...and they run well over $5K quickly as you start to beef them up.

    And hey...it is a business write off!! Yet another good reason to incorporate yourself.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  7. Re:And still no Mac Pro. by laughing_badger · · Score: 3, Informative

    Still planned for 2018 AFAIK. Non-trashcan modular design.

    --
    Help children born unable to swallow - www.tofs.org.uk
  8. Re:Imagine by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Needs beefy machine.

    Runs 2011 MBP.

    Well, I've been struggling with what I have for a number of years....and right now, the old system doesn't do what I need.

    Not to mention, for big purchases, I like to save my nickles and dimes and buy what I want/need with cash and have no buyers remorse...therefore rather than make lots of small purchases, I save up and buy big and best as I can periodically.

    Currently, I can bog the little systems down for DAYS at a time with a heavy After Effects render.

    And I can't do much with Resolve before it halts things to a snails pace.

    So, yes, I'm looking for dropping some coin on a high end workstation type unit, that will hopefully get my preferred workflows going at a manageable speed, and hopefully, last me for a few years to come.

    Again, I've looked at something comparable, as recommended by Blackmagic Design, for running Resolve (linux or windows) with the HP Z840...which also get $$$ very quickly.

    I did a very quick comparable on the HP z840 to the base iMac pro and it was about $4665...it isn't exact, but is close to what Apple purports the base iMac pro to be. And also, the iMac pro includes the 5K 27" monitor which you would have to add to the HP or other comparable unit.

    No, not everyone needs this type of workstation, but if you are wanting to do a good bit of quality video, SPFX and even some high end photography compositing, etc....a nice high end system can make your day and workflow work for you.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  9. Re:Imagine by Yaztromo · · Score: 3, Informative

    But you also get expandability, and of particular interest in your specific case Resolve leverages multiple GPUs so if things start to slow down you can simply add another GPU to the HP system and you're good to go, to improve the performance on the iMac you have to scrap the entire system, including the display, and buy a new one.

    That is not true -- macOS High Sierra supports external Thunderbolt 3 connected GPUs.

    Yaz