- Aug 25, 2001
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Discussing if Apple's M1 silicon is the future of computing, and discrete CPU and GPU days are numbered.
Maybe this should go in the Apple M series silicon thread, sorry.
IMO, you'll still will be able to.That's the keyword. Something that Applers refuse to acknowledge. PC users have more freedom. We can switch between AMD/Intel/Nvidia as our heart desires.
Been there, done that, didn't work as well as a full system. I ended up collapsing several devices into a single case instead and boosting the horsepower of all systems involved.NUC/SFF with external expansion.
IMO, entry level to mainstream/midrange will be NUC/SFF with external expansion. Perfectly viable for 90% of users.
The cheap & integrated mini-Mac and mini-PC have existed for many years now, with all the performance needed for office and media consumption. Mainstream Joe is already rocking an AIO, SFF system, hybrid laptop or mobile.
The part that's left is productivity and gaming, and here's the one aspect the video avoids talking about: the $4000 price tag on the Mac Studio with M1 Ultra, or $2000 for the M1 Max. Last year I spent no more than $1000 to upgrade my PC to 12700K & 64GB of RAM while choosing to keep the existing GPU / PSU / SSDs / cooling. Now imagine having to spend $2600 even if all I want is 64GB of RAM, or $4800 for 128GB. Because "fully integrated". And remember: the main reason enthusiast DIY is supposed to die out is higher cost over integrated solutions.
Enjoying the paradox already?![]()
Its so clean and easy to use! 42 external devices and it just works! The benefits of a Trash Can Pro Studio!
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Of course, most people also qualify as "stupid", too. (*)You may not like that a phone that takes special tools and instructions to open or car with lots of attention paid to optimal cupholder locations instead of the location of the oil filler tube is the result, but that's what most people want.
That's how we end up in discussions like thisOf course, most people also qualify as "stupid", too.
OC them both and see which one survives getting melted by the other running Furmark. Or even more fun, OC them, put them both on VR duty, one running a VR game and the other VRMark. Just ideas in case you get bored of them co-existing peacefullyHell even my debug station i use to test gpu's, has both nvidia and amd card sitting together, tangoing peacefully for now.
I want products intelligently designed, for an intelligent person to operate.
True story: a guy in my university class (Bachelors of Computer Science) declared that his CDROM drive damaged his computer. We asked him how. He said that he took out the PATA/power cables to connect a hard drive to his PC to transfer data. When he connected the Molex connector back to the CDROM drive, there was a spark and some burning smell and his PC died. So we asked him, was the computer on? He said yesNever underestimate peoples creativity in operating stuff wrong* either. That never ceases to amaze me.
*Sometimes dangerously wrong too.
Here's an idea I'm gonna get a lot of flak for: AIOs/hard to upgrade laptops/SFF PCs are meant for non-techies. Think parents/grandparents/wives/girlfriends/females who waste most of their budget on make-up and Gucci bags etc.
If only it were that easy,.I'm pretty much over it and just want my tech to work without having to think about it.
Macs aren't higher cost because they're integrated. Sure, upgrades "cost more" if everything is soldered down since you basically replace the whole thing - but why allow them at all? Fewer and fewer people ever upgrade their PC during its life, why waste money including CPU sockets, DIMM slots, PCIe slots etc. most of your customers will never use? Build a fixed config PC for the masses, then address the niche market of people who want to DIY or possibly upgrade later in life separately.
Did you mention, specialized mining rigs, with multiple large GPUs?What's "DIY PC" today?
-PCs in large USB stick form factor
-mITX versions which allow full customization, ranging from integrated CPUs all the way to larger ones that allow high end dGPUs to be installed.
-Market around passive PCs. FanlessTech is an example of a really good site showing the countless varieties out there that goes large as a full ATX size!
-Bunch of Raspberry Pi-esque options ranging from Intel to AMD to various ARM options
-Those that make their own routers.
-Desktop computers in cases of thousands of different design options or even those that roll their own case(inside a Teddy Bear!).
Did you mention, specialized mining rigs, with multiple large GPUs?![]()
I would be the last person to say I'm smarter than the people who have money to buy expensive stuff. They must be doing SOMETHING smarter than me to end up with more money than me"I'm smarter than the idiots who buy that stuff, and other stuff I think is stupid like makeup and Gucci bags"
That may be true, but the rise of ARM in Cell Phones hasn't killed the DIY PC off, thankfully.My argument was techies vs. non-techies. There might be Gucci-bag-loving female techies out there but I would be surprised if they are even 1% of all techies in existence. Point is, non-techies outnumber us and we are an endangered species. Non-techie PC usage preferences will hurt us sooner or later by forcing companies to prioritize them over us.
Point is, non-techies outnumber us and we are an endangered species. Non-techie PC usage preferences will hurt us sooner or later by forcing companies to prioritize them over us.
That may be true, but the rise of ARM in Cell Phones hasn't killed the DIY PC off, thankfully.
I would love to know the number of girls with the latest iPhones (paid through installments!) doing exactly thatYou really aren't going to compare 16 year old girl candy crush players to PC gamers are you?
You do realize this is the main reason why Intel failed in the smartphone/tablet market, right? They were afraid if they created chips that were "too good" they'd get used in low end PCs, and since they had to sell them for $30 to compete with ARM SoCs that would have cut the legs out from their <$100 PC CPU market.
I would love to know the number of girls with the latest iPhones (paid through installments!) doing exactly that
My gut says that there are more girls like that than there are PC gamers out there.
For the past 10 years I used an OEM computer, never had any fault with it.I'm as techie as anyone here but I choose iPhone over Android, and I would have no problem buying a laptop with everything soldered down. I build my own PCs but because I want it completely silent, not because I want super fast performance. I used to love to tinker with that sort of thing, but having done it since I was a kid in the Atari 8 bit days I'm pretty much over it and just want my tech to work without having to think about it.
Never underestimate peoples creativity in operating stuff wrong* either. That never ceases to amaze me.
*Sometimes dangerously wrong too.