Quote from: GabrielH on March 16, 2021, 09:34:48Most of all, it's incredibly overpriced. It can have a 28 core processor which is still pretty powerful. But it's +$7000 option, on top of the $6000 base price (which includes an 8 core processor). Even measly 12 core option is +1000. That's not Intel pricing, that's Apple. For $6000, I can build a nice workstation with a 64 core Threadripper. Although I would probably stick with 32 core, unless your application really benefits from those extra cores. Of course, GPU is a big variable (my work is primarily CPU bound). 3970X should score close to 50k in CB R23 IIRC.
Not happening.
Even this VERY optimistic estimation would place the M1X at the bottom of the scale for high range workstations. There's a reason the comparison was with the 2019 Mac pro : it's terrible and outdated. Wasn't good at launch, isn't good now.
Quote from: ROGER RAW on March 16, 2021, 06:11:22
It has been a long time comming, but Apple is finally going to say goodbye to the inferior PC geared chip market and show the world what a computer should be. Good luck WINDOZE with your antiquated hardware and crap software.
Quote from: AngelKing48 on March 15, 2021, 18:13:11Of course his prediction, at least for CB R23, is wrong. If we assume 8 Firestorm cores + 4 Icestorm cores running at the same frequencies as in M1. No way it can score 14700. Mathematical impossibility. You can't turn 7700 into 14700 by adding 4 Firestorm cores. You'd need to raise frequency to get there. Which could happen, I guess. Higher power limit, more refined process, higher yields.
This is the same guy who thought the 4K Apple TV would make the PS5 and XSX obsolete and the M1 MBA would be a redesigned 32 core 3nm CPU with a 2080 ti level GPU.
Quote from: Fargas on March 15, 2021, 13:32:59
Mac Mini's should be the only desktop form for Apple, giving users the freedom to connect whatever size monitor(s) they desire.