Mac Pro
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Mac Pro | |
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Type: | Desktop computer |
Developer: | Apple Computer |
Released: | August 7, 2006 |
Processor(s): | Intel Xeon, 2 × dual-core 2.0, 2.66 or 3.0 GHz 64-bit |
Base Price: | USD$2,121 (standard configuration US$2,499) |
Website: | www.apple.com/macpro/ |
The Mac Pro is a Macintosh workstation manufactured by Apple Computer based on Intel Xeon microprocessors and a PCI Express architecture. Apple introduced the Mac Pro on August 7, 2006 at the Worldwide Developers Conference, to replace the Power Mac G5.[1] Along with the new Xeon-based Xserves, the Mac Pro completes Apple's transition from the PowerPC to x86 architecture.
Contents |
[edit] Overview
The Mac Pro uses two Xeon 5100 "Woodcrest" 64-bit CPUs for a total of four processor cores. Each CPU chip has 4 MB of on-chip cache shared by its two cores and a 64-bit 1.33 GHz front side bus. The computer's main memory uses 667 MHz FB-DIMMs installed in pairs, offering throughput of 1.33 GHz. There are a total of 8 DIMM slots on two riser cards. The Mac Pro can hold up to 16 GB of memory.[2][3]
For internal expansion the Mac Pro has four PCI Express (PCIe) expansion slots. The first slot is intended to hold the main video card; the slots are arranged with an empty area the width of a normal card beside the video card in order to leave room for the large coolers modern cards often use. In most machines, one slot would be blocked by the cooler. The three slots can be configured individually to give more bandwidth to devices that require it, although the total throughput is actually slightly less than the late model Power Mac G5's throughput. The PCI slots use captive screws and are deigned for "no-tool" installation of cards. The Mac Pro does not support SLI or CrossFire, limiting its ability to use the latest "high-end gaming" video card products. The PCI-Express slots are also not backwards compatible with earlier PCI slot specifications and hardware, such as PCI-X.
The Mac Pro also has room for four internal hard drives, each with its own SATA-300 port. The hard drives use a sliding drive bracket with captive screws, for easy "no-tool" installation. There are no cables to be attached, the SATA and power connectors are firmly attached to the case, and the drive is connected to them simply by pushing it in. Two optical drive bays are included, each with a SATA-300 port as well as one ATA-100 port shared between the two bays. Many optical drives still use the older ATA ports, including those currently being shipped with the machines.
For external connectivity the system includes five USB 2.0 and four FireWire ports, two of the latter being FireWire 800. Networking is supported with two built-in Gigabit Ethernet ports, while 802.11 a/b/g WiFi is supported via an optional AirPort Extreme card. Bluetooth is also an optional built-to-order option. Unlike other recent Mac products, the Mac Pro does not include the infrared receiver needed to use the Apple Remote. Curiously, Front Row is installed on the Mac Pro, but cannot be accessed using the normal Cmd-Esc key combination.
The exterior of the aluminum case is similar to that of the Power Mac G5, with the exception of an additional optical drive bay, and a new arrangement of I/O ports on both the front and the back. The Xeon processors generate much less heat than the previous dual-core G5s, so the size of the cooling devices has been reduced significantly. This allowed the interior to be re-arranged, leaving more room at the top of the case and allowing the drives to double in number. Less heat also means less air to move out of the case for cooling during normal operations; the Mac Pro is very quiet in normal operation, quieter than the Power Macintosh G5.[4]
Marketing materials for the Mac Pro generally refer to the middle-of-the-line model with 2 × dual-core 2.66 GHz processors. In the past Apple has featured the base model with the words "starting at" or "from" when describing the pricing, but the online Apple Store lists the "Mac Pro at $2499", the price for the mid-range model. The base model can be configured at US$2121, much more comparable with the former base-model dual-core G5 at US$1999, although offering considerably more processing power.
[edit] Specifications
- Processors: Two dual-core Xeon 5100 Series ("Woodcrest" Core microarchitecture with EM64T instruction set) processors at 2.0, 2.66 or 3 GHz
- Memory: Minimum 1 GB 667 MHz DDR2 buffered ECC RAM (upgradeable to 16 GB), in eight FB-DIMM slots
- Graphics: nVidia GeForce 7300 GT 256 MB (up to four total), ATI X1900 XT 512 MB (requires use of the x16 PCI-Express slot) or nVidia Quadro FX 4500 512 MB (also requires use of the ×16 PCI-Express slot)
- Storage: Four drive bays for Serial ATA hard disks: included disks have 8 MB cache and run at 7200 RPM (total storage with four 750 GB hard drives, 3 TB)
- Optical Drive: 16× SuperDrive (multiple DVD write formats) (Pioneer DVR-111D or Sony DW-D150A), optional second drive. Optical bays support ATA/100 and SATA.[2]
- Networking: Dual Gigabit Ethernet, optional AirPort Extreme 802.11 a/b/g, optional Bluetooth
- I/O: Five USB 2.0 (two on front), two FireWire 400 (one on front), two FireWire 800 (one on front), optical audio input and output, 3.5 mm stereo audio input and output (one output on front)
- Software: Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger, iLife '06, Comic Life, OmniOutliner, various trial software.
[edit] Compatibility
[edit] Software
- Software (PPC Emulation) - PPC-Native Applications: Note that many high-end PPC-native applications will need to be modified specifically to take advantage of the new Intel-based processor architecture in order to maximize on the Mac Pro's processor strengths, and PPC-native applications (such as Adobe Photoshop CS2 and earlier) may successfully run through emulation software called Rosetta, which adds overhead and reduces actual software execution speed for those applications as it translates PPC-native instructions to Intel-native code. Speeds for some of these PPC-native applications may be lower on the Mac Pro than on the G5 models it replaces, and Rosetta does not support G5-processor-specific emulation.
- Software (Classic Emulation) - Classic (Mac OS 9.x and earlier): This first generation of Intel-base Macs cut the life-support cord for Classic (Blue Box) emulation, and do not support Classic software.
- OS Minimums - The lowest version of the operating system that will support the Mac Pro is Mac OS X version 10.4.7. Earlier versions will not boot the computer.
[edit] Hardware
- PCI-Express slots are not backwards compatible with prior versions of PCI hardware, such as PCI/33, PCI/66 nor PCI-X.
- Apple recommends an Apple-specified heat sink on each memory DIMM for cooling, and the required on-chip thermal manager may shut down memory, or increase fan speed, if it starts to over heat.[5] [6] At least one company, MaxUpgrades.com, has released a self-installable Apple-specified heat sinks for use with third-party memory.
[edit] References
- ^ Keynote presentation at the Worldwide Developers Conference, August 7, 2006.
- ^ a b Mac Pro Developer Note
- ^ http://www.apple.com/macpro/specs.html
- ^ "Mac Pro", Ars Technica.
- ^ "News Archive for: Monday, August 21, 2006", Xlr8yourMac.
- ^ "Mac Pro Memory Issues", Ars Technica.
[edit] External links
- Apple.com — Mac Pro website
- Close-up pictures of the Mac Pro
- Review of the Mac Pro
- Memory Cooling Notes, xlr8yourmac
- Memory Heatsink Compatibility Issues, Ars Technica
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