Apple's New Mac Pro to Ship in December at $2,999
Apple's cylindrical desktop now has a price and a release timeframe.
Get 3DTested's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Back in June, Apple offered us a quick look at a new breed of Mac Pro. Though the company was more than happy to talk about the computer's innovative design, we didn't get a whole lot of information regarding the guts of the machine. At its event today, Apple went into a lot more detail about what's under the hood on the new Mac Pro.
Â
Assembled in the United States, the Mac Pro features a 3.7 GHz quad-core Xeon from Intel. This is working alongside two AMD FirePro D300 GPUs, 12 GB of 1866MHz DDR3 RAM, 256 GB of PCIe flash storage (read/write speeds of 1.2 GBps/1 GBps) and up to six Thunderbolt 2 ports. Customers can configure their Mac Pro with as much as 64 GB of RAM and 1 TB of flash storage, so while pricing starts at $2,999, you can expect that baseline price to rise if you make changes to the specs.
Article continues belowRead all about the Mac Pros CPU: Intel's 12-Core Xeon With 30 MB Of L3
Â
The Mac Pro's glossy, cylindrical design is drastically different than anything Apple has done before. Apple's marketing chief Phillip Schiller called the center of the Mac Pro's design a "thermal core" back in June. The cooling solution is certainly innovative, featuring a center piece made of a three-sided heatsink, with each side cooling the entire length of each PCB. A single large fan pulls the hot air up and out.
Apple is promising a December ship date, though the company didn't specify whether the Mac Pro would enjoy a global rollout.
Get 3DTested's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Follow Jane McEntegart @JaneMcEntegart. Follow us @tomshardware, on Facebook and on Google+.

-
therogerwilco The components add up to about 1000-1200$. Fools and their money will soon be parted.Reply -
wolley74 can anybody find anything on the GPUs in it? I cannot find a single thing called AMD FirePro D300 anywhere on any websiteReply -
realibrad Reply11771707 said:The components add up to about 1000-1200$. Fools and their money will soon be parted.
I hear there are people who pay for large black things. I have even seen vids of women enjoying them.
You may not want to pay a premium of $1,000 but its a cylinder, so it totally could go for more.
Cylinders, they are the new cubes... -
santiagoanders The D300 is about equivalent to a FirePro W7000 (given the number of shaders, compute power, and memory bandwidth). But it looks like they skimped on VRAM - the FirePro W7000 has 4GB per card, not 2GB.Reply -
ap3x "The components add up to about 1000-1200$. Fools and their money will soon be parted."Reply
Please explain your math? Using the exact same parts. Xeons and everything, next tell me how much it cost to support this $1200 machine for one year, keep in mind that you also need to include the cost of software and lastly, find a workstation class board that has 6 thunderbolt 2 ports on it and provide that as well.
I think you will find that what you just mentioned does not exist and a comparable machine from another manufacturer costs fairly close to this machine if not more.
Also, Workstation class machine, not a gaming machine. The differences is productivity + making money vs wasting time + loosing money. -
g-unit1111 Reply11771674 said:Mac Pro brought to you by Dyson.
It does look like a vacuum cleaner doesn't it?:lol:
-
del35 Waooo, Apple is soooooooooo innovative! Surely morons will be lining up to buy the piece of crap.Reply -
colson79 Reply11771707 said:The components add up to about 1000-1200$. Fools and their money will soon be parted.
The 2 CPU's and GPU's alone cost over $1200.