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How Apple can solve its Mac Pro processor problem

Even without a super-fast M2 Extreme chip, Apple can still make its most powerful Mac stand out. Michael Simon reports

If you’ve been anxiously awaiting the launch of the Apple silicon Mac Pro and dreaming of the fastest Mac ever, you might be in for a disappointment. A report last month from Bloomberg’s Mark

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Gurman (fave.co/3i3a7X5) said that Apple is having major problems producing the so-called M2 Extreme chip that was supposed to power the new machine.

As a result, Gurman says, the topof-the-line Mac Pro will likely have a slightly faster M2 Ultra chip with

24 CPU cores and 76 GPU cores. Granted, that’s still a very fast chip, but for Mac Pro buyers who have been waiting to see the next speed evolution of Apple silicon on the Mac, it’s likely to be a disappointment. The gap between the Mac Pro and the next fastest Mac is supposed The Mac Studio could be a stop-gap machine that never to be massive, and gets an update and fades into oblivion. the chip Gurman describes won’t be.

But all is not lost. Even without a crazy fast chip, Apple can still make the Mac Pro the centrepiece of its Mac line-up. Here are three ideas on how to address this major problem.

KEEP INTEL INSIDE

The easiest way to overcome its chip issues would be to just keep Intel around. The people who buy a Mac Pro wouldn’t necessarily care which company makes the CPU as long as it’s fast, and Intel makes plenty of newer Xeon W chips it could use.

It’s not a crazy notion. While Apple’s Mac chips are ridiculously fast, many Mac Pro buyers would probably rather just replace one of their existing Intel Macs with a faster one than worry about the potential compatibility and expandability issues with a new Apple silicon machine.

FOCUS ON EXPANDABILITY

The most interesting titbit in Gurman’s report wasn’t the supposed cancellation of the Extreme chip, it was his claim that the new Mac Pro “will retain one of its hallmark features: easy expandability for additional memory, storage, and other components”. That’s a somewhat vague statement

that’s open to some interpretation, but it seems to indicate that the Mac Pro’s processor will feature a new architecture that doesn’t use unified memory.

That alone will be a powerful selling point for the Mac Pro. No other Apple silicon-based Mac offers aftermarket upgrades in any way, so if users are able to add memory and storage, that would definitely be a unique selling point. But what would make it more unique is if Apple sold the components itself. It would be pricey for sure, but if Apple sold RAM sticks, SSDs, and standalone GPUs, it would surely cover up the fact that the Mac Pro isn’t as fast as everyone thought it would be.

RETIRE THE MAC STUDIO

If the Mac Pro is only slightly faster than the top Mac Studio configuration, perhaps Apple doesn’t need to sell the Mac Studio anymore. It always felt like a stopgap machine, kind of like the iMac Pro – a powerful niche Mac that was filling the space between Mac Pro models. If the Mac Studio is a one-and-done machine, no one would be surprised or upset, especially if an updated M2 Pro/M2 Max Mac mini and the rumoured iMac Pro revival arrives this year as well.

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