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Macbook pro late 2013
Macbook pro late 2013







macbook pro late 2013
  1. #Macbook pro late 2013 full
  2. #Macbook pro late 2013 Pc
  3. #Macbook pro late 2013 mac

#Macbook pro late 2013 mac

If you’re going to connect Thunderbolt 2 devices to the Mac Pro as well as a 4K display, you’ll want to make sure that they aren’t on the same chain.

#Macbook pro late 2013 full

Read performance remained untouched since display data only flows from host to display, leaving a full 20Gbps available for reads. I measured less than 4Gbps of bandwidth (~480MB/s) available for writes to a Thunderbolt 2 device downstream from the Mac Pro if it had a 4K display plugged in to it. Remember that there’s only 20Gbps available in each direction, and running a 3840 x 2160 24bpp display at 60Hz already uses over 14Gbps of bandwidth just for display. Although you can daisy chain a 4K display onto the back of a Thunderbolt 2 storage device, doing so will severely impact available write bandwidth to that device. Here’s where the six Thunderbolt 2 and three TB2 controllers come into play. The impact of chaining a 4K display on Thunderbolt 2 downstream bandwidth Due to overhead and PCIe 2.0 limits (16Gbps) you won’t be able to get much closer to the peak rates of Thunderbolt 2. So far I’ve been able to sustain 1.38GB/s of transfers (11Gbps) over Thunderbolt 2 on the Mac Pro. Given how big of a focus 4K support is for Apple this round, Thunderbolt 2 mates up nicely with the new Mac Pro. Storage performance should go up if you have enough drives/SSDs to saturate the interface, but more importantly you can now send 4K video over Thunderbolt. The total bi-directional bandwidth remains at 40Gbps, but a single device can now use the full 20Gbps. Thunderbolt 2 bonds these channels together to enable 20Gbps in each direction. That meant no individual device could get access to more than 10Gbps of bandwidth, which isn’t enough to send 4K video. The original Thunderbolt spec called for 4 independent 10Gbps channels (2 send/2 receive). What’s new in TB2 is its support for channel bonding. You can use all previous Thunderbolt peripherals with the Mac Pro. The interface is fully backwards compatible with Thunderbolt 1.0. How does Thunderbolt 2 differ from the original? For starters, it really would’ve been more accurate to call it Thunderbolt 4K. The FirePro’s display outputs are available via any two of the six Thunderbolt 2 ports, as well as the lone HDMI port on the back of the Mac Pro. Here’s where Apple’s custom PCB work comes in handy as all of this is done internal to the Mac Pro.

macbook pro late 2013 macbook pro late 2013

#Macbook pro late 2013 Pc

On a DIY PC you enable display output over Thunderbolt 2 by running an extra cable out of the discrete GPU and into a separate input that muxes the signal with PCIe and ships it out via another port as Thunderbolt. Typically you’d route all display through processor graphics, but in the case of IVB-EP there is no integrated graphics core. Pairing Thunderbolt 2 with Ivy Bridge EP is a bit tricky as Apple uses Thunderbolt 2 for display output as well as data. These are the fully configured controllers, each supporting and driving two Thunderbolt 2 connectors on the back of the Pro for a total of 6 ports.

macbook pro late 2013

The new Mac Pro integrates three Intel Falcon Ridge Thunderbolt 2 controllers.









Macbook pro late 2013