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Mac Pro With Apple Silicon Won’t Have Upgradeable RAM, Report Claims – Tom’s Hardware

Apple has one more computer to convert to Apple Silicon: the Mac Pro. And it sounds like it will be more familiar than we expected. According to Mark Gurman’s “Power On” newsletter for Bloomberg, an upcoming refresh will appear identical to the 2019 version.

To some, that’s a bit of a shame, as many of Apple’s designs featuring its own silicon have been evolving. But more interesting to us here at Tom’s Hardware is what’s going on inside. Previous Bloomberg reports suggested that a high-end Mac Pro with 48 CPU cores and 152 graphics clusters was languishing, and now Gurman says it has been canceled. Instead, he writes that Apple will release the Mac Pro with the M2 Ultra, an evolution of the M1 Ultra found in the Mac Studio.

Apple Silicon chips have all had RAM onboard, and that makes for an odd setup for the Mac Pro. Gurman’s newsletter suggests that unlike the Intel Xeon-based model from 2019, the upcoming Mac Pro won’t have upgradeable RAM. That being said, he reports that there will be two SSD storage slots and room for “graphics, media and networking cards.”

It’s extremely interesting to see the suggestion that graphics cards will be modular here, as Apple has been relying on its own integrated graphics on all Apple Silicon devices. (Apple claimed the Mac Studio with M1 Ultra rivals the RTX 3090, though independent testing suggested that wasn’t the case, especially in gaming.) I suppose it’s possible that somewhere, Apple is writing drivers for AMD or Nvidia’s cards. Or it could be using something like the Apple Afterburner card, which it introduced with the 2019 Mac Pro for Video editing in the ProRes and ProRes RAW codecs. The existing Mac Pros are based on Intel Xeon chips and work with AMD Radeon Pro graphics (the most recent are W6000X cards designed exclusively for Apple’s tower, bringing AMD’s RDNA 2 graphics in 2021).

When Apple released the Mac Studio, it said in its announcement video that the beefed-up Mac Mini wasn’t replacing the Mac Pro. There will be a question, however, of which to get if upgradeability is limited anyway, especially if the Mac Studio gets a bump to M2 Ultra. But it’s likely that the Mac Pro will cost far more than the Studio currently does.

In other Mac news, Gurman reports that the 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros, some of the best ultrabooks, will get spec bumps with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips in the first half of the year, and that there’s still a planned 15-inch MacBook Air sometime in 2023.

The iPad, Apple Watch and AirPods are likely to see small bumps, with no news for Apple TV hardware. Some of this is due to Apple’s focus on announcing a mixed-reality headset, possibly called Reality Pro, ahead of its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June, reportedly to launch in the fall.

Source: https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiPWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRvbXNoYXJkd2FyZS5jb20vbmV3cy9tYWMtcHJvLXNvbGRlcmVkLXJhbS1yZXBvcnTSAQA?oc=5

Author: Mac