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brian_herman parent
Couldn't you buy a Mac Ultra with more memory for the same price?

jsheard
This Asus box costs $3000, and the cheapest Mac Studio with the same amount of RAM costs $3500, or $3700 if you also match the SSD capacity.

You do get about twice as much memory bandwidth out of the Mac though.

What's the cheapest way to get the same memory and memory bandwidth as a Mac Studio but also CUDA support?
embedding-shape
CUDA is only on nvidia GPUs, I guess a RTX Pro 6000 would get you close, two of them are 192GB in total. Vastly increased memory bandwidth too. Maybe two/four of the older A100/A6000 could do the trick too.
deeviant
RTX pro does not have NV-link, because money, however. Otherwise, people might not have to drop 40,000 for true inference GPU.
bigyabai
Somehow, it is still cheaper to own 10x RTX 3060s than it is to buy a 120gb Mac.
woodson
The Mac will be much smaller and use less power, though.
embedding-shape
How does the introspection/debugging tools look like for Apple/Mac hardware when it comes to GPU programming?
bigyabai
Would almost be a no-brainer if the Mac GPU wasn't a walled garden.
Someone1234
The resale cost shouldn't be ignored either, that Mac Studio will definitely resell for more than this will by a significant amount. Least of all because the Mac Studio is useful in all kinds of industries whereas this is quite niche.
brian_herman OP
Oh thanks for clarifing!
simlevesque
Cuda is king
MangoToupe
Still? Really? Why?
baby_souffle
Inertia. Almost everybody else was asleep at the wheel for the last decade and you do not catch up to that kind of sustained investment overnight.
whywhywhywhy
Better support than MPS and nothing Apple is shipping today can compete with even the high end consumer CUDA devices in actual speed.
MangoToupe
Presumably the second point is irrelevant if you're choosing among devices with unified memory.
bigyabai
It is not. Unified memory is not a panacea, it says nothing about the compute performance of the hardware.

The Spark's GPU gets ~4x the FP16 compute performance of an M3 Ultra GPU on less than half the Mac Studio's total TDP.

whywhywhywhy
Depends if you care how fast the result arrives. Imagery gen is a very different tool at <12 seconds an image vs nearer to 1 minute.
embedding-shape
For how shit it all is, it's still the easiest to use, with most available resources when you inevitable need to dig through stuff. Just things like nsight GUI and available debugging options ends up bringing together a better developer experience compared to other ecosystems. I do hope the competitors get better though because the current de facto monopoly helps no-one.
My reasons for not choosing an Apple product for such a use-case:

1- I vote with my wallet, do I want to pay a company to be my digital overlord, doing everything they can to keep me inside their ecosystem? I put too much effort to earn my freedom to give it up that easily.

2- Software: Almost certainly, I would want to run linux on this. Do I want to have something that has or eventually will have great mainstream linux support, or something with closed specs that people in Asahi try to support with incredible skills and effort? I prefer the system with openly available specs.

I've extensively used mac, iphone, ipad over time. The only apple device I ever bought was an ipad, and I would never buy it, if I knew they deliberately disable multitasking on it.

Not disagreeing with any of your points, but this is a good trend right?

https://github.com/apple/container

> container is a tool that you can use to create and run Linux containers as lightweight virtual machines on your Mac. It's written in Swift, and optimized for Apple silicon.

bigyabai
That would have been an impressive piece of technology in 2015, when WSL was theoretical. To release it in 2025 is a very bad trend, and it reflects Apple's isolation from competition and reluctance to officially support basic dev features.

Container does nothing to progress the state of supporting Linux on Apple Silicon. It does not replace macOS, iBoot or the other proprietary, undocumented or opaque software blobs on the system. All it does is keep people using macOS and purchasing Apple products and viewing Apple advertisements.

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