But not me

Solitaire gamers with a strong desire to have a T2 installed to rule them all?EvilDragon wrote: ↑Jun 04, 2019 1:23 amBut still, I wonder who's actually going to buy the maxed out machines.
I’m kinda assuming that it is trivial to add more SSD storage. Still, I guess it’s odd that you can’t spec it with more.EvilDragon wrote: ↑Jun 04, 2019 1:23 am So you can have up to 1.5 TB of RAM, but SSD storage tops at 4 TB? Just...![]()
The solution imo Paul is to embrace a disabled VE Pro template. You'll most likely never get anywhere near 64gb again.
Guy Rowland wrote: ↑Jun 04, 2019 5:44 pmThe solution imo Paul is to embrace a disabled VE Pro template. You'll most likely never get anywhere near 64gb again.
This!
I agree!
Not as good as you'd hope, because they're putting lower freq Xeons in this one. The "4.4 GHz turbo" statement only applies to a SINGLE CORE BOOST, not an all-core boost. i9-9980XE would oust most of the specced Xeons for breakfast, because you could clock it higher across all cores.
Absolutely not. At least not for our workloads, clock speeds are ALWAYS going to be important. See video above.
ARM would of course not be a drop-in replacement to existing presented Mac Pro. They need their own motherboards etc. they're completely incompatible to the Intel platform.Guy Rowland wrote: ↑Jun 06, 2019 9:57 amLikely in another year or two they'd update processors to ARM... who knows how that would work out, but its possible then that they'd be able to get the single core performance nearer where it should be while retaining high numbers of cores.
They way Mac Pro's been setup in the past I'm more than certain that ARM will be a drop-in replacement.EvilDragon wrote: ↑Jun 07, 2019 1:16 am ARM would of course not be a drop-in replacement to existing presented Mac Pro. They need their own motherboards etc. they're completely incompatible to the Intel platform.