Roberto Lequeux
Well-known member
[NEVER ENDING RANT]
This is just for fun guys so don't knock me down.
This is NOT a straight comparison, and I am not a dumb, so please don't point out something I am about to point out myself and do so as if I am a complete idiot. I am writing in clear English. I hope ;-)
I decided to see where the $$$ hardware comparison was currently in the Apple vs. PC situation. With all this talk about the overpriced dual Nehalem chips and what not. Some applications are tied to CPU clock, as it was pointed out in a thread by the friendly and tech savvy folks from Boxx. So I thought, let's see what you would get over at a place like Newegg where you can get most enthusiast hardware at lowest or very close to lowest available prices most the time.
On the blue corner, weighing in at $5,969.00, a Mac Pro with:
_(2!) 2.92GHz Quad Nahealem processors!
_(6) 1GB 1066MHz DDR3 EDIT: I forgot to factor in the additional cost of the 6 x 2GB DDR3 third party sticks
_(1) 640GB 7200rpm drive
_(1) NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 512MB
You would save if you got RAM and HDDs else wear. These are not even factored into the price!!!
On the RED corner : ) weighing in at a svelte $5,635.8, a DIY PC:
_(1) 2.66GHz i7 920 Nehalem processor (3.8GHz minimum overclock)
_(6) 2GB 1600Mhz DDR3 (known to hit as high as 2000Mhz)
_(6) 1.5TB 7200.11 Seagate
_(1) GeForce GTX 260 Superclocked 896MB
So those are the main components... the Apple will have 16 threads, the PC only 8. However the PC will have a 30% faster clock speed. The Apple can go up to 24GB of DDR3 while the PC will be limited to only 12GB till the 4GB sticks come out. However, the PC memory will be MUCH faster. Those sticks can hit up to 2000Mhz at their spec timings of 8-8-8-21 which are not slow timings... that is some serious RAM. You will have six 1.5TB drives already in the package with the PC while you still need to go out and pay for those at the current price on the Mac. You will have a MUCH faster video card on the PC, though getting into card compatibility would make this much more complicated so we better ignore the card completely for this comparison. However if you want to make it fair you should realize that the $300 some odd dollar difference in total price for the setups is more than the $200 difference for the HD 4870 512MB, and the cost of the card included on the PC is HIGHER than the $140 you would pay for the 4870 at Newegg (with a better cooler!).
So there is the straight up comparison... 2-cores at 2.92GHz or one at 3.8GHz and more RAM capacity being the only upside with Mac. Though dual CPU motherboards are not Apple's exclusively for much longer so bye bye to that. And don't forget that 4GB DDR3 will come out, and as of now 12 (faster) GB of RAM isn't a bad place to be anyway...
I purposely left OS out of the equation, but to be it should be mentioned that Mac's OS is included in their price. I figured if you are buying a PC you either already own Windows or rather not talk about this.
.
.
.
.
Oh! Darnet... I almost forgot... I did add a few other goodies to the PC with the left over cash:
_ (1) HP Dream Color 24"!!!!!
_ (1) nice 1920 x 1200 LCD
_ (1) ARC-1231ML RAID card (with 2GB)!!!!!
_ (1) Blu-Ray/DVD/CD burner
Take the Dream color out of the equation and that just might be enough to cover the dual socket Motherboard and second chip even within the first month or so of their release. If that isn't enough to cover it then taking out the Blu-Ray burner and the second 24" monitor will... and you still get to keep your RAID card!
That RAID card, by the way... would allow you to have INSANE RAID options... and would be more than enough for .R3D work. It is overkill for the internal drives but what the heck... there was a lot of money to spare...
Also notable:
_ The PSU I added is a 750W MONSTER, an true overclocking legend capable of powering everything without breaking a sweat, and incredibly quiet.
_ The CPU cooler is WAY more than enough for 3.8Ghz (AS paste included!)
_ The case has excellent air flow. Induction is through all 6 HDDs and the exhaust drives the air up and out through the CPU... this allows to set the 120mm fans to medium, but even at high they are very quiet. The sound level will be set by the CPU fan speed which won't need to be too fast since the i7's run super cold. (don't like the lights just snip the LED wires)
_ The mouse is phenomenal, I love mine.
A Kona or other card would also have to be factored but that would be a whole other ball game and were not factored into either price.
Aaaand... the only thing I left out as far as I can tell was the keyboard, but getting a FCP specific keyboard would even out the price after you decide what video card you would want on the Apple side.
So there it is... hardware.
Though, I could also look up how much Apple would charge you to match all the other areas straight off their site? Just for fun... (on top of the dual 2.92Ghz CPUs of course). Well... let's just say that it isn't possible.
However, if you maxed out their drives, got two of their 24" LCDs, which are not dream colors but probably significantly nicer than the other 24" I added... if you got their RAID, which as far as I know will likely be humiliated by the Areca... if you got the best video card that they decided you are worthy of, and you added 12GB (6x2GB) of significantly slower DDR3... then you are within fifty bucks of $10,000.
Again... this is not a straight up comparison... it is Apples and Oranges. Or apples and PCs. And it gets even more complicated when you take into account the different workflows available for .r3d. Some take advantage of all 16 threads, some (as mentioned by someone who really knows) still benefit from CPU clock speed.
Also, I only did this for fun and out of curiosity... and in the hardware sense, the real questions are:
_ What will be offered (OR NOT) once Apple's exclusivity license expires in terms of dual CPU Motherboards?
_ What will happen to Apple prices (OR NOT) once that happens?
_ Will dual Xeon 5500 Motherboards overclock at all? even if just a little bit
_ Will dual 17 boards ever happen?
_ What kind of awesomeness will take place with Apple's new OS?
_ Stability? ;P
Let's not forget for the super busy working pros that will likely want to slap me if they read this... IF these things happened, then WHEN?
For some that do less work or want personal a station at home these things may carry a lot of weight. For others, the time that it may take to read this never ending rant may be worth more than $10k. But then why are you reading this? ;-)
[/NEVER ENDING RANT]
EDIT: I realize the $10,000 wise-ass crack at Apple is a bit much. However, because I feel the mark ups are a bit obscene when you consider the unsuspecting consumers that fall into them, I am not deleting it and just adding this disclaimer so we don't get a 100 posts ripping me a new one. I do realize it is a bit much to say in a forum where most know what they are doing. My bad.
This is just for fun guys so don't knock me down.
This is NOT a straight comparison, and I am not a dumb, so please don't point out something I am about to point out myself and do so as if I am a complete idiot. I am writing in clear English. I hope ;-)
I decided to see where the $$$ hardware comparison was currently in the Apple vs. PC situation. With all this talk about the overpriced dual Nehalem chips and what not. Some applications are tied to CPU clock, as it was pointed out in a thread by the friendly and tech savvy folks from Boxx. So I thought, let's see what you would get over at a place like Newegg where you can get most enthusiast hardware at lowest or very close to lowest available prices most the time.
On the blue corner, weighing in at $5,969.00, a Mac Pro with:
_(2!) 2.92GHz Quad Nahealem processors!
_(6) 1GB 1066MHz DDR3 EDIT: I forgot to factor in the additional cost of the 6 x 2GB DDR3 third party sticks
_(1) 640GB 7200rpm drive
_(1) NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 512MB
You would save if you got RAM and HDDs else wear. These are not even factored into the price!!!
On the RED corner : ) weighing in at a svelte $5,635.8, a DIY PC:
_(1) 2.66GHz i7 920 Nehalem processor (3.8GHz minimum overclock)
_(6) 2GB 1600Mhz DDR3 (known to hit as high as 2000Mhz)
_(6) 1.5TB 7200.11 Seagate
_(1) GeForce GTX 260 Superclocked 896MB
So those are the main components... the Apple will have 16 threads, the PC only 8. However the PC will have a 30% faster clock speed. The Apple can go up to 24GB of DDR3 while the PC will be limited to only 12GB till the 4GB sticks come out. However, the PC memory will be MUCH faster. Those sticks can hit up to 2000Mhz at their spec timings of 8-8-8-21 which are not slow timings... that is some serious RAM. You will have six 1.5TB drives already in the package with the PC while you still need to go out and pay for those at the current price on the Mac. You will have a MUCH faster video card on the PC, though getting into card compatibility would make this much more complicated so we better ignore the card completely for this comparison. However if you want to make it fair you should realize that the $300 some odd dollar difference in total price for the setups is more than the $200 difference for the HD 4870 512MB, and the cost of the card included on the PC is HIGHER than the $140 you would pay for the 4870 at Newegg (with a better cooler!).
So there is the straight up comparison... 2-cores at 2.92GHz or one at 3.8GHz and more RAM capacity being the only upside with Mac. Though dual CPU motherboards are not Apple's exclusively for much longer so bye bye to that. And don't forget that 4GB DDR3 will come out, and as of now 12 (faster) GB of RAM isn't a bad place to be anyway...
I purposely left OS out of the equation, but to be it should be mentioned that Mac's OS is included in their price. I figured if you are buying a PC you either already own Windows or rather not talk about this.
.
.
.
.
Oh! Darnet... I almost forgot... I did add a few other goodies to the PC with the left over cash:
_ (1) HP Dream Color 24"!!!!!
_ (1) nice 1920 x 1200 LCD
_ (1) ARC-1231ML RAID card (with 2GB)!!!!!
_ (1) Blu-Ray/DVD/CD burner
Take the Dream color out of the equation and that just might be enough to cover the dual socket Motherboard and second chip even within the first month or so of their release. If that isn't enough to cover it then taking out the Blu-Ray burner and the second 24" monitor will... and you still get to keep your RAID card!
That RAID card, by the way... would allow you to have INSANE RAID options... and would be more than enough for .R3D work. It is overkill for the internal drives but what the heck... there was a lot of money to spare...
Also notable:
_ The PSU I added is a 750W MONSTER, an true overclocking legend capable of powering everything without breaking a sweat, and incredibly quiet.
_ The CPU cooler is WAY more than enough for 3.8Ghz (AS paste included!)
_ The case has excellent air flow. Induction is through all 6 HDDs and the exhaust drives the air up and out through the CPU... this allows to set the 120mm fans to medium, but even at high they are very quiet. The sound level will be set by the CPU fan speed which won't need to be too fast since the i7's run super cold. (don't like the lights just snip the LED wires)
_ The mouse is phenomenal, I love mine.
A Kona or other card would also have to be factored but that would be a whole other ball game and were not factored into either price.
Aaaand... the only thing I left out as far as I can tell was the keyboard, but getting a FCP specific keyboard would even out the price after you decide what video card you would want on the Apple side.
So there it is... hardware.
Though, I could also look up how much Apple would charge you to match all the other areas straight off their site? Just for fun... (on top of the dual 2.92Ghz CPUs of course). Well... let's just say that it isn't possible.
However, if you maxed out their drives, got two of their 24" LCDs, which are not dream colors but probably significantly nicer than the other 24" I added... if you got their RAID, which as far as I know will likely be humiliated by the Areca... if you got the best video card that they decided you are worthy of, and you added 12GB (6x2GB) of significantly slower DDR3... then you are within fifty bucks of $10,000.
Again... this is not a straight up comparison... it is Apples and Oranges. Or apples and PCs. And it gets even more complicated when you take into account the different workflows available for .r3d. Some take advantage of all 16 threads, some (as mentioned by someone who really knows) still benefit from CPU clock speed.
Also, I only did this for fun and out of curiosity... and in the hardware sense, the real questions are:
_ What will be offered (OR NOT) once Apple's exclusivity license expires in terms of dual CPU Motherboards?
_ What will happen to Apple prices (OR NOT) once that happens?
_ Will dual Xeon 5500 Motherboards overclock at all? even if just a little bit
_ Will dual 17 boards ever happen?
_ What kind of awesomeness will take place with Apple's new OS?
_ Stability? ;P
Let's not forget for the super busy working pros that will likely want to slap me if they read this... IF these things happened, then WHEN?
For some that do less work or want personal a station at home these things may carry a lot of weight. For others, the time that it may take to read this never ending rant may be worth more than $10k. But then why are you reading this? ;-)
[/NEVER ENDING RANT]
EDIT: I realize the $10,000 wise-ass crack at Apple is a bit much. However, because I feel the mark ups are a bit obscene when you consider the unsuspecting consumers that fall into them, I am not deleting it and just adding this disclaimer so we don't get a 100 posts ripping me a new one. I do realize it is a bit much to say in a forum where most know what they are doing. My bad.