By Steve Lo, posted Feb 14, 2012 at 8:10 AM, 13,856 views,

Apple Is Close to Finally Updating The Mac Pro

So it has been awhile, but we finally have some very exciting news for you dear readers. Apple is close to finally updating the Mac Pro. The previous issues we mentioned will be fixed by major changes that suppliers are introducing. What changes are they? What is the expected timeframe? Read on to find out!

You will remember we covered the Mac Pro story some months previous here, telling you guys the new Mac Pro will use a new processor, but there are issues that were holding it back from fulltime production.

Well, we have some good news, Intel will be moving to its Ivy Bridge platform in April, and this will solve heating issues. How does it do that? Well, with its 22nm (extremely efficient) manufacturing process, it is very efficient in operation in comparison to the previous Sandy Bridge. More importantly, the old transistor types are gone, and replaced by “tri-gate” transistors. According to our sources, those transistors are 30%+ more efficient with heat dissipation.

Ivy Bridge is the first chip to use Intel’s 22nm tri-gate transistors, which will help scale frequency and reduce power consumption

Apple, being one of Intel’s most reliable customers, our sources have told us that the engineering samples for the new processors, with 8 cores and a shocking 20MB of cache have been given out and tested to Apple. Furthermore, the overheating issues, they are gone, and the manufacturing yield is now high enough for Apple to maintain its high profit margin.

Basically, we are going from two high performing 6 cores, to two even higher performing 8 cores. The updated chipset will also help the performance greatly over the previous generation. Excited yet? But there are some other changes as well.

Apple, went with ATI graphics last generation, and got burned. Flickering, artifacts, overheating, no display, the list goes on. The drivers ATI made for the Mac Pro to take the upgrade kit were also notoriously flaky. Even after Apple updated the drivers, many users still had issues, especially in professional tasks. And this cost Apple a significant amount of money they are looking to not repeat this again.

Nvidia Kepler series graphics cards are set to release in April/May time frame

Nvidia has their “Kepler” platform due out around the same time as Intel is making their changes, and our sources within the company indicate that they have chosen to have Nvidia lead the charge so to speak on the graphics front. This is good for all our compatriots who want to use the special graphics engine in Adobe products, as it supports Nvidia only, or for those who wish to do CUDA based programs as well, again only supported by Nvidia.

We hear rumblings that you should see some changes near the end of quarter three, when they have ironed out all the bugs with the newly released hardware. This could be moved up or down slightly, depending on things like number of key parts available, recalls and driver/software issues.

As always, we will keep you posted as we get more information.


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  • Anonymous

    Please get it in the store, then I can go and buy it. My 2008 Mac Pro is past retirement age!

  • http://blog.conigs.com conigs

    Wouldn’t new Mac Pros be based on Sandy Bridge, not Ivy Bridge? I thought the mobile & desktop variants were due in April with the Xeon class appearing much later. We’re still waiting for Sandy Bridge Xeons at this point. If Apple has Ivy Bridge chips for testing, that will be for iMacs, Mac Minis, MacBook Airs and MacBook Pros… most certainly not Mac Pros.

    • Steve Lo

      Intel has the low voltage uniprocessor variants for Sandy Bridge, they never released the 8 core variants or others due to issues with manufacturing. My understanding is that they will move to Ivy Bridge, rather than use old tech.

      • http://blog.conigs.com conigs

        That’s the thing, though. If we’re still waiting on the Sandy Bridge-EP variants due to technical issues, what makes anyone think the Ivy Bridge-EP variants are coming any time soon? Last I saw, they were due Q3 or Q4 of this year.

  • Anonymous

    LMAO,this article is so so bad.
    Intel is about to release their new server platform Romley and it is  Sandy Bridge.based on 32nm,you won’t see any Ivy Bridge 8 cores Xeons anytime soon.

    ” those transistors are 30%+ more efficient with heat dissipation.” – maybe someone should google “heat dissipation”

    ” manufacturing yield is now high enough for Apple to maintain its high profit margin ‘” – sure because Intel’s yields got anything to do with Apple’s margins

  • sabrina D

    Good news.. Waiting for the product 

  • Alex

    i will have a sandy bridge pc with kepler: i7 3770 and gtx 560 for under 1000$ and use a cracked lion parallel with windows 7, as OS. Problem mac users?

    • Alex

      i mean gtx 660

  • aeassa

    The upcoming 8 core/16T Sandy Bridge EP is what will be used in the new Mac Pro. The 22nm refresh in the server/workstation arena based on Intel’s “Ivy Bridge” architecture, Ivy Bridge EP, will not be released by Intel until Q1/Q2 2013 at the earliest. Ivy Bridge for consumers will be released in April of this year, and will be a uniprocessor capable chip on the LGA 1155 platform. 

  • AppleFootSoldier

    This (if true) is GREAT news for a Creative Pro/Power User like me.

    However, Windows PCs/Workstations have for long had a distinct and non-trivial advantages over Mac Pros for MANY years now: dual card slots (with spacers for double-wide GPU cards) and the ability to install two to four identical graphics cards in a powerful parallel processing arrangement using nVidia’s SLI or ATi’s CrossFireX. (Some cards are now triple-wide! needing triple spacing between PCI slots!)

    Apple can put the sickest nVidia or ATi card in a Mac Pro, but Windows PC users will be able to put two identical cards in their machines and run SLI or CrossFireX and get at least double the power via parallel processing.

    That’s not to mention dual-GPU cards. Windows supports not only multiple cards from nVidia and ATi, but third-party cards that license their chipsets, over clock them and feature 3GB DDR5 RAM

    • Broke-A$$ MF

      Good post.

      Microsoft also allows broad programmability of graphics cards. Graphics cards are eminently programmable and the same card can be customized optimally for, say, Photoshop, or programmed optimally for Final Cut, or programmed optimally for AutoCAD.

      Apple >barely< allows such programmability on the three or so cards OS X supports, making Windows machines more pragmatic to Professionals who would really rather use Macs. But business is business, and you can't always afford to make your most idealistic decisions and stay competitive.

      So there are a lot of Mac fans out there using Windows machines out of necessity.

  • Arnold

    this article is absolute misleading.
    Intel will release the workstation Xeon E5-2600 (8C/16T) series series this March. By the time Apple will launch their Mac Pros with those chipset. 
    If you’re talking about Ivy Bridge in April, thats a consumer chipset that you’ll see on iMac. I doubt Mac Pro will use that chips.

    Check out Intel roadmap 2012. you’ll see Ivy Bridge Xeons will happen either Q4 or Q1 next year and Apple won’t wait for that long

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Hiroshi-Imaizumi/100000683029783 Hiroshi Imaizumi

    やっとじゃないか! 遅いよー AppleStoreのカートにはMacBookProが入ってんぞ!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Hiroshi-Imaizumi/100000683029783 Hiroshi Imaizumi

    やっとじゃないか! 遅いよー AppleStoreのカートにはMacBookProが入ってんぞ!

  • Christopher Sauter

    Dear God please let this happen sooner than later…  i’m running my entire recording studio on a Quad Core HP Laptop right now… 

  • http://www.facebook.com/kurt.s.mason Kurt S. Mason

    This sounds way beyond what I heard prior to reading this…. Yay…. I’m glad Apple is still in the computer making business. The Ivy chip is a big step, having Thunderbolt will be a god send as well.

    Rock on Apple

  • InsideFame

    Looking forward to this amazing leap.
    Especially the Mac Pro.  It is sooooo overdue for an update