Take a nice long look at the Apple’s cylindrical work of the art known as Mac Pro, whose release date in the 2013 is around the corner. Now forget about it and look away. The new Mac Pro 2013 is a lot of things, but it’s maybe not for you. It’s focused severely on the high end computing market, the video and graphics professional who want wads of editing bays and expansion cards.
That’s not the most people. In fact the latest and new Mac Pro 2013, like its forerunner, is focused at only a few things. And it will have a price tag of thousand dollars to prove that point. So what is the big deal behind the Apple’s new cylinder of a computer?
The Apple’s iMac has every bit of the computing power, the most users will ever need packed into its monitor, revealing the fact that the PC mini towers have been empty boxes focused on looking hollowly powerful. The rise of the laptops has brought a termination to the era of monitor being thought of as a distinct component of the computer anyway.
But there’re a few people who use their PC in an awkward way, doing overly compound professional projects that push the boundaries of the most powerful hardware. That is why a Mac Pro, already expected the singularly powerful computer to ever come to the market, is overtly expandable.
But if you aren’t one of the handful people who want an overwhelmingly strong computer to do heavy grade tasks on the daily basis, the new Mac Pro is just a shiny thing to admire while walking past it in the App Store as you move to the MacBook or iMac section.