I Have Some Questions About the New New Mac Pro

It’s been one day since Apple announced a new Mac Pro, so we are now safely within the time period in which we can go back to worrying about the product and its future.

2023 Mac Pro

Back in 2006 when the first Mac Pro was announced, we were already at the tail end of the era of desktop tower Macs. 17 years later, notebooks are more popular than ever, and in the age of Apple silicon, they are more powerful than ever, too.

That puts desktop Macs on thinner ice than ever before in terms of unique capabilities. That’s not to say that Apple is abandoning the category — other than the seemingly-forgotten 24-inch iMac and the lack of a larger all-in-one, things are firing on all cylinders.

The Mac Studio is the greatest example of this. I don’t think anyone had “New Pro Desktop” on their bingo card for 2022, not to mention an update a year into its life. In my brief ownership of an M1 Max version of the machine, I was blown away by the performance Apple managed to cram into what is basically a taller Mac mini.1

Sitting between the Mac mini and Mac Pro, the Mac Studio has probably taken customers away from both, but I have to imagine the Mac Pro is on the losing side of that equation.

The new new Mac Pro is powered by the same M2 Ultra chip as found in the new high-end Mac Studio, with all of the good and bad that brings. It is amazingly fast, and the SoC blows away the old Xeon + Afterburner arrangement in the 2019 machine when it comes to encoding video.

The M2 Ultra Macs

However, it also comes with all the downsides of being an SoC. Gone is the 1.5 TB RAM limit of the 2019 Mac Pro, but more importantly, gone is the ability to add RAM after purchase. The same thing goes for upgrading the GPU.

The truth in 2023 is that Mac Pro you buy today will be the same core machine in five years, and that’s just not something we’re used to seeing when it comes to this machine.

Upgradability, of course, is just one side of the coin. The other is expandability. For those who rely on capture cards, huge amounts of internal storage and other PCI-based solutions, the Mac Pro continues to be their only option in Apple’s line.

The number of 2019 Mac Pros sold cannot be huge, but the new one’s numbers are going to be even smaller. As a Mac Pro fan that worries me. Yes, there are users who are reliant on PCI solutions and I’m sure those folks will upgrade to this new machine at some point. Those who purchased a Mac Pro in the past to have a machine they could keep current over the long haul are seemingly out of luck.

Are some extra Thunderbolt ports and a bunch of open PCI slots enough to justify the Mac Pro’s $3,000 premium over the Mac Studio? For most users, my guess is no. The days of the Mac Pro being the most powerful, most capable Mac are over, at least for now.

If a future Mac Pro has an SoC unique to it, as it was rumored a couple of years ago, that would certainly be exciting. M3 Extreme, perhaps? Off-die GPUs, anyone?

Several of us who cover Apple have heard that there are those inside the company that did not want this machine to see the light of day, believing the Mac Studio to be enough to hold down the high-end of the Mac line. Seeing the machine that Apple announced this week, I think they may eventually get their way.


  1. The fan noise also blew me away. I ended up mounting the thing under my desk. 

Some of my Favorite Small Software Announcements from WWDC 2023

…in no particular order, except the first two which I am psyched about:

  • Interactive widgets.
  • Find My items can now be shared with others.
  • Offline access to Maps.
  • Medication alerts can now repeat if medication is not logged, and can be sent as critical alerts. I bailed on Medication reminders last year due to a lack of this.
  • Name Drop.
  • Inner-app linking in Notes.
  • Profiles and shared passwords in Safari.
  • Mood tracking in Health.
  • Widgets on the Mac desktop.
  • One-time verification codes received in Mail are filled in automatically in Safari, just like ones from Messages.
  • Quick muting on AirPods.
  • The new iPhone Standby feature can show different things based on where your iPhone is when charging.
  • Pet “faces” in Photos.
  • Automatic grocery item sorting and a new column view in Reminders.
  • Share contents from an Apple Note into Pages for more layout tools.

My least favorite thing? That creepy heart AR demo.

In related news, Dan Moren has a long list of features that were not mentioned on stage compiled over on Six Colors.

System Requirements for iOS 17, iPadOS 17, watchOS 10 and macOS Sonoma

Here’s a list of all iPhone models that are compatible with iOS 17:

  • iPhone XS and XS Max
  • iPhone XR
  • iPhone 11
  • iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max
  • iPhone 12 and 12 mini
  • iPhone 12 Pro and Pro Max
  • iPhone 13 and 13 mini
  • iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max
  • iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max
  • iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd gen)

iOS 17 drops support for the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X.

iOS 17

On the iPad front, these models are supported moving forward:

  • iPad Pro (2nd generation and later)
  • iPad Air (3rd generation and later)
  • iPad (6th generation and later)
  • iPad mini (5th generation and later)

watchOS 10

watchOS 10 has the same requirements as watchOS 9 had a year ago:

  • Apple Watch Series 4
  • Apple Watch Series 5
  • Apple Watch SE
  • Apple Watch Series 6
  • Apple Watch Series 7
  • Apple Watch Series 8
  • Apple Watch Ultra

macOS Sonoma

macOS Sonoma is compatible with the following Macs, dropping support for the 2017 iMac and MacBook Pro, as well as the last 12-inch MacBook model:

  • MacBook Pro: 2018 and later
  • MacBook Air: 2018 and later
  • Mac mini: 2018 and later
  • iMac: 2019 and later
  • iMac Pro: 2017
  • Mac Studio: 2022 and later
  • Mac Pro: 2019 and later

There are no Intel Macs on sale as new, so the timer is running for when macOS is Apple silicon-only.

The 15-inch MacBook Air

Over at The Verge, Dan Seifert has a hands-on with the new notebook:

Apple just announced the new MacBook Air 15, a 15-inch version of the most popular laptop in the world. I just saw it in person. As you can probably guess, it’s just like the smaller MacBook Air, but now it’s bigger.

There were literally no surprises from the hands-on. It feels just like the 13.5-inch model from last year. It’s thinner and lighter and less dense than a 16-inch MacBook Pro, as you’d expect, with a screen that isn’t as nice. It does have six speakers, but I didn’t get to test them.

Sounds exactly like what a lot of folks wanted. I have a friend and a family member both ordering new notebooks today.

Apple has a video up showing off the new computer:

The New New Mac Pro

There’s a new Mac Pro in town, powered by the M2 Ultra chip that is also found in the new Mac Studio.

2023 Mac Pro

As you can see, the new machine utilizes the same design as the 2019 model, both outside and inside, plus a whole bunch of extra Thunderbolt ports around back:

2023 Mac Pro Internals

That second image shows off the difference between this machine and the Mac Studio: internal PCI. Here’s Apple PR:

The new Mac Pro brings PCIe expansion to Apple silicon for pros who want the performance of M2 Ultra and rely on internal expansion for their workflows. Mac Pro features seven PCle expansion slots, with six open expansion slots that support gen 4, which is 2x faster than before, so users can customize Mac Pro with essential cards. From audio pros who need digital signal processing (DSP) cards, to video pros who need serial digital interface (SDI) I/O cards for connecting to professional cameras and monitors, to users who need additional networking and storage, Mac Pro lets professionals customize and expand their systems, pushing the limits of their most demanding workflows.

You will notice a real lack of GPU expandability in that paragraph. Even in this $6,999 machine,1 Apple silicon graphics remain on-die.

It is, however, much, much faster than my old 2019 machine:

Mac Pro delivers the groundbreaking performance of M2 Ultra, plus the versatility of PCIe expansion, taking the most demanding workflows to the next level. While the Intel-based Mac Pro started with an 8-core CPU and could be configured up from there, every Mac Pro has Apple’s most powerful 24-core CPU, an up to 76-core GPU, and starts with twice the memory and SSD storage. The new Mac Pro can also be configured with up to a massive 192GB of memory with 800GB/s of unified memory bandwidth. This is far more memory than the most advanced workstation graphics cards. Now every Mac Pro has the performance of not just one but seven Afterburner cards built in. It also features the same industry-leading media engine as Mac Studio with M2 Ultra. Both can play an unprecedented 22 streams of 8K ProRes video.

When compared to the Intel-based Mac Pro, Mac Pro with M2 Ultra:

  • Empowers demanding real-world pro workflows like video transcoding and 3D simulations to run up to 3x faster.
  • Enables video engineers to ingest 24 4K camera feeds and encode them to ProRes in real time, all on a single machine, when using six video I/O cards.

RIP, Afterburner.

The M2 Ultra appears in all new Mac Pros, and can be specced to include:

  • 24-core CPU, 76-core GPU and 32-core Neural Engine (+$1,000)
  • 192 GB of unified memory (+$1,600)
  • 8 TB SSD (+$2,200)
  • Stainless steel wheels (+$400)

I for one am staying put with my 14-inch M2 Pro MacBook Pro as my primary Mac, but if I still had my 2019 Mac Pro, I’d be jonesing for an upgrade… and selling a kidney to make it possible.


  1. Yes, it starts at $1,000 more than the 2019 model. 

Apple Vision Pro, By the Numbers

At WWDC today, Apple unveiled Vision Pro, it’s first spatial computer.

Apple Vision Pro

There is a lot to unpack with this new device and platform, but here are some numbers to get thing started:

  • Its two displays pack in more than 23 million pixels. Each display is akin to a 4K display.
  • The headset is powered by two Apple silicon chips: the M2 for computing tasks and the new R1 for dealing with real-time sensor data from 12 cameras, five sensors and six microphones.
  • The R1 also streams new images to the displays within 12 milliseconds8 times faster than the blink of an eye.
  • Virtual screens can scale up to 100 feet in width, complete with 3D movies and Apple Immersive Video, that offers 180-degree high-resolution recordings with Spatial Audio.
  • Each audio pod contains two individually amplified drivers.
  • There are two physical input devices on the headset: a digital crown to adjust levels of immersion, and a shutter button to capture spatial photo and video.
  • There are zero physical controls to move around the user interface. Vision Pro is designed to work with the user’s hands, eyes and voice.
  • The screen is a singular piece of three-dimensionally formed and laminated glass.
  • The Light Seal and headband will be available in a range of sizes.
  • On battery, the Apple Vision Pro will run for two hours, but it can also be used plugged in.
  • Apple is touting more than 100 Apple Arcade titles for the new system.
  • Apple boasted that it filed over 5,000 patents in the development of the platform.
  • It will cost $3,499 when it goes on sale early next year in what appears to be just one country, the U.S.

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My Picks for WWDC

The 2023 WWDC keynote is just a few days away, so before any more last-minute leaks make it out, I wanted to put my line in the sand for what I expect to see Monday.

On this week’s Connected, I made the following picks:

  • Apple will announce a 15-inch MacBook Air.
  • The phrase “One more thing” will be used before The Headset is announced.
  • The announced price of The Headset will be less than $2,500.

That last one generated quite a bit of conversation on the show. The rumors have been pretty consistent that this thing is going to be in the neighborhood of $3,000, and it doesn’t seem like there’s any counter-reporting planted by Apple to adjust expectations. So either The Headset is going to be that expensive, or Apple is going to surprise us, and likes the bar set where it currently is.

This was my “risky pick,” so I admit I’m out on a limb here, but even at $2,500, it is going to be pricey. I can see Apple preferring to rip the bandage off now, so by the time it goes on sale people have had time to digest (and prepare for) the price. If they announce it now, it’ll cloud the coverage of the device, but at least that cloud will have time to clear before pre-orders open.

Here are the rest of my picks on the show:

  • The keynote video runs over 2 hours.
  • The 15-inch MacBook Air will be powered by an M3.
  • Apple reframes an existing feature as being powered by “AI.”
  • Jeff Williams has a major role in introducing the headset.
  • iPadOS 17 gains Lock Screen customization.
  • We see a Mac Pro preview.
  • The next version of macOS is not called Skyline, as Viticci has predicted.

I think all of these are pretty straight forward, and I feel pretty good about most of them.

No matter who wins on Connected next week, WWDC is going to be jam-packed and should be one for the books. I’ll be in Cupertino Tuesday-Thursday and can’t wait to talk about all of this with folks.