In one test, the site put a Red Raw 4K clip in a 4K project and added 18 effects the clip rendered and played in real time without dropping frames.
Similarly, the user-run Final Cut Pro X site fcp.com published its initial tests based on a Mac Pro similar to ours. This demo was, of course, designed to show the Mac Pro in the best light, but it’s a demo few computers could do at all. An Apple demonstration to Macworld staff was likewise striking, as it involved Final Cut Pro X displaying 16 different angles of 4K Multicam video simultaneously, while live-rendering 4K video with multiple, complex effects applied. The Mac Pro’s Final Cut Pro X performance was especially impressive, as it finished our rendering test in half the time of the next-fastest Mac, and about a quarter of the time it took on two 2012 Mac Pros (a quad-core and a dual six-core). Located just below the top of the cylinder,Īpple sells two stock configurations of the 2013 Mac Pro, each running OS X 10.9 Mavericks The new Mac Pro also contains only a single fan. Stock Apple / Intel E5-2697 V2 12-core 2.70GHz Configuration: Mac Pro (Late 2013) The standard configuration of this model has an LED-backlit 17.0″ widescreen TFT active-matrix “glossy” display (1920×1200 native resolution), but it also was offered with an “anti-glare” (matte) display for US$50 more.Īpple Late 2013 Mac Pro 2.7 Ghz 12 Core/ 64GB RAM/ 1 TB FLASH /AMD FirePro D500Ĭonfigurable to 2.7GHz 12-core processor with 30MB 元 cacheĭual AMD FirePro D500 graphics processors with 3GB of GDDR5 VRAM each Inside the yellow box are 16 x 512 MB DDR3 SDRAM (8 GB total) memory chips. Here is the logic board from iFixit's Teardown of the low end 15'' model (2.0 GHz, 8 GB RAM, 256 SSD). The MacBook Pro “Core i7” 2.0 15-Inch (Late 2013) features a 32 nm “Sandy Bridge” 2.3 GHz Intel “Core i7” processor (2860QM), with four independent processor “cores” on a single silicon chip The RAM is soldered to the logic board in all of these models. Other than processor (and the corresponding larger level 3 cache), these two models are identical.
The MacBook Pro Retina “Core i7” 2.0 15-Inch (Late 2013) technically is a “configure-to-order” configuration of the MacBook Pro “Core i7” 2.3 15-Inch (Late 2013), but also is documented as a separate model for reader convenience.