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Late 2013 mac desktop
Late 2013 mac desktop












late 2013 mac desktop

Fitting all these components into a case, and creating good airflows to make sure each can adequately cool, requires a relatively large enclosure. Traditionally, each heat-producing component in a desktop computer-CPU(s), graphics chips, memory, and so on-has had its own heat sink, and sometimes even its own fan.

late 2013 mac desktop

#LATE 2013 MAC DESKTOP PRO#

Instead, the 2013 Mac Pro offers most of its expansion options on the outside: Turn the cylinder around, and you’ll find a compact panel that hosts a slew of ports and connectors: four USB 3.0 ports, six Thunderbolt 2 ports (two each on three independent controllers), two gigabit ethernet ports, an HDMI 1.4 (audio+video) port, a 1/8-inch analog/optical-digital line-out jack, and a 1/8-inch headphone/headset jack.īut Apple also reduced the Mac Pro’s size with some clever engineering. Apple achieved this size reduction in part by doing away with many things professional-level computers have traditionally reserved internal space for: multiple bays for hard drives, multiple slots for graphics and expansion cards, and space for an optical-drive (or two). It truly is a tiny computer given its capabilities. It even looks somewhat silvery in bright light. As we noted in our first impressions, while Apple’s PR videos and images make the new Mac Pro look like a dark, metallic gray-almost black-it’s really closer in color to the new Space Gray finish of Apple’s current iPhone and iPad models. Apple has done away with the massive enclosure of the 2012-and-earlier Mac Pro: The new Mac Pro is instead a small cylinder with a beautiful, unibody exterior made from a single block of aluminum. If you’re reading this, chances are you know all about the new Mac Pro’s design, but here’s a refresher. You’ll have to decide if Apple’s new approach is right for you. The best I can do is tell you what the new Mac Pro is, what it does, and how well it does those things. I’m not here to tell you which view is right or wrong, because real people with real jobs and real needs hold each. Thanks to its diminutive profile and attractive design, the Mac Pro is clearly meant to be a computer for your desk, rather than something you hide under your desk Both sides can make a good case: Depending on your particular uses and needs, the new Mac Pro may be exactly what you want (a state-of-the-art, multi-core-processor, workstation-GPU computer that doesn’t waste space and resources on expandability you may never use), or nothing like what you need (a workhorse tower with tons of bays and slots for expansion). Others thought it was a slap in the face of “real” pro users. Some people thought the new computer was a brilliant design that embraced current trends in high-end computing. The short answer is, “It depends.” When the new Mac Pro was announced this past summer, the initial reactions were, to put it mildly, polarized. Does it live up to its name as a professional’s Mac? Whatever you call it, it’s the company’s new flagship computer-its halo car, if you will-and we’ve been putting it through its paces.

late 2013 mac desktop late 2013 mac desktop

Apple calls it the Mac Pro (Late 2013) a snarky reviewer might call it the Mac Pro (Almost 2014).

  • Higher-end configurations quickly get expensiveīack in June, when Apple gave us a preview of the new Mac Pro, the company said it would ship “later this year.” Here we are, just a few days shy of 2014, and the new Mac Pro has arrived.
  • Single-core performance not substantially better (and sometimes worse) than that of other current Macs.













  • Late 2013 mac desktop