Quote from: Dan Ridenhour on April 21, 2021, 21:29:04I think you are conflating dedicated with external. Nvidia chips were never officially supported. And I'm not expecting them to support AMD on non-Intel Macs. Whether there are dedicated GPUs (as in not integrated, separate from CPU - a chip dedicated to graphics processing) is really a question of architecture and how powerful they want to make their computers. There is a limit as to how big a chip can be. And when you have to break it up, how do you do it? Are you doing to separate CPU and GPU? Are you going to work with two identical chips? Are you going to put them into a single package or separate packages?
For what its worth, I REALLY don't think we are going to see dedicated GPU options from apple anymore. Rumors already have them scaling up the M1x to 32 gpu cores... and I just can't see them 'adding' support for nvidia and external GPUs that have high power draws and thermal envelopes they can't control. It just re opens them to a lot of the problems they said they were getting rid of by going to apple silicon in the first place. I think AMD/NVidia on mac are end of life / doa at this point.
Quote from: Ishraqiyun on April 20, 2021, 22:01:00
So a bigger, bulkier, immobile M1 Macbook... or a M1 Mac Mini with a screen... A M1 MBA with an external 4K monitor is about the same price and more practical.
Quote from: Ishraqiyun on April 20, 2021, 22:01:00
So a bigger, bulkier, immobile M1 Macbook... or a M1 Mac Mini with a screen. What a shame and a missed opportunity. A M1 MBA with an external 4K monitor is about the same price and more practical. Or if you are really dead set on having something that isn't meant to be mobile, get a M1 Mac Mini and a 4K display.