Apple on Tuesday unveiled its latest Mac Pro, which the company claims is its fastest ever with eight processor cores standard.
The Mac Pro definitely sounds like it pops a wallop. Here are the details:
Add it up and Apple claims a 61 percent increase in memory throughput based on preproduction testing. The full footnote provided in Apple’s statement is as follows:
Testing conducted by Apple in December 2007 using a preproduction 2.8 GHz 8-core Mac Pro with a 2.66 GHz quad-core Mac Pro. All systems were configured with 4GB of RAM. Results are based on the STREAM v. 5.6 benchmark (http://www.cs.virginia.edu/stream/ref.html) using OMP support for multiprocessor-compiled builds. All systems were configured with 8GB of RAM. Performance tests are conducted using specific computer systems and reflect the approximate performance of Mac Pro.
The new Mac Pro starts at $2,799, but build to order systems will run you more. Apple also touted the Mac Pro’s expansion capabilities. There are four internal hard drive bays with direct-attach, cable free installation of four 1TB Serial ATA hard drives. If you’re a video, content, creative professional type you’re probably salivating. And if you’re not a creative professional you’ll probably still want one (at least I do).
Separately, Apple rolled out its latest Xserve rack server. The Xserve starts at $2,999 and has up to two quad-core Xeon processors. An unlimited client license to Mac OS X Server Leopard is included. Here are the standard specs:
These systems show how Apple’s decision to build on Intel’s platform makes so much sense. As Intel ramps up the processing speed, Apple can tag along. And given Intel is rolling these days, Apple can refresh systems rapidly.