Tuesday, March 19th 2013

Sapphire Launches Graphics Accelerator for Mac Pro

SAPPHIRE Technology, the leading manufacturer and global supplier of graphics solutions based on AMD technology, has just announced an exciting new graphics accelerator compatible with the Apple Mac Pro series of desktop computers.

Exclusive to SAPPHIRE, the HD 7950 Mac Edition is based on AMD's latest Graphics Core Next (GCN) architecture. This highly acclaimed architecture delivers a significant graphics performance boost for Mac Pro users in a wide range of applications including gaming, audio or video editing and content creation. For example, gaming frame rates are increased by over 200%, general benchmark performance increased by around 30% and graphics intensive benchmarks increased by as much as 300% compared with the NV 8800GT commonly used in these machines (SAPPHIRE internal data).

The SAPPHIRE HD 7950 Mac Edition is equipped with 3 GB of the latest GDDR5 memory, and its Dual Asynchronous Compute Engines (ACE) deliver up to 2.87 TFLOPS Single Precision compute power. It provides hardware support for Open GL 4.2 and Open CL 1.2 as well as AMD HD3D technology and APP acceleration.

AMD's GCN architecture supports a number of advanced post-processing and scaling operations. These include de-blocking, de-noising, automatic de-interlacing, Mosquito noise reduction and edge enhancement as well as advanced image quality enhancement technology, such as adaptive anti-aliasing and 16x angle independent anisotropic texture filtering. The SAPPHIRE HD 7950 Mac Edition features AMD PowerPlay technology which provides automatic power management during operation and ensures low power consumption under idle conditions.

Flexible display support

Cutting-edge integrated display support includes two mini DisplayPort outputs with a maximum resolution of 3840 x 2160 per display under MacOS X. The card also features a 3 GHz HDMI 1.4a port. This output also supports a maximum resolution of 3840 x 2160.

Finally, there is a Dual-link DVI port with HDCP, which supports a maximum resolution of 2560 x 1600. As this is a DVI-I port it can also be used with the older style VGA monitors, with adapter supplied. The card supports two display outputs to be used at the same time, allowing dual monitor configurations to be used for increased productivity.

The SAPPHIRE HD 7950 Mac Edition is compatible with Apple Mac Pro models from 2010 and later with an available PCI-Express x16 slot. Two six-pin power cables required are supplied with the card. A driver disk is provided which enables the card to be used with Mac OS X 10.7.5 (Lion), 10.8.2 (Mountain Lion) or later.

The SAPPHIRE HD 7950 Mac Edition can also be used in the latest PC architectures. It has Dual Firmware support via a simple Firmware (Dual BIOS) switch. In one position the Sapphire HD 7950 MAC Edition supports Mac OS X/Windows under non-UEFI compliant mode and in the other it supports Windows with UEFI hybrid firmware enabled. A Windows driver disk is also included.

Under Windows, additional features are supported, including hardware acceleration of video decoding, HDMI audio pass through and additional display resolutions.
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23 Comments on Sapphire Launches Graphics Accelerator for Mac Pro

#1
Lionheart
Really love the look of it :)
Posted on Reply
#2
RCoon
I swear we saw this news not long ago, or was that a very similar article with slight differences etc?
Posted on Reply
#3
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
RCoonI swear we saw this news not long ago, or was that a very similar article with slight differences etc?
Wasn't that a nVidia card though?

Edit: Where you thinking about this?
LionheartReally love the look of it :)
Me too. I bet you that fan gets pretty loud when it starts ramping up though as squirrel cage fans do.
Posted on Reply
#6
adulaamin
looks cool... I hope it's not priced like a Mac... :)
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#7
Ghost
adulaaminlooks cool... I hope it's not priced like a Mac... :)
Reportedly, it's going to be only 60-100% more expensive than a standard HD 7950.
Posted on Reply
#8
dj-electric
Dear Sapphire,

Some of us actually REALLY like this deisgn and may want one for out own PC to go with our other Black-White themed hardware.

Thanks. :)
Posted on Reply
#9
Widjaja
With cases and other hardware starting to be released in white I am pretty sure even PC enthusiasts would be interested in this colour scheme.
Posted on Reply
#11
dj-electric
dunnmelaniejLook is great.... But what extra features are there which makes it so expensive?
Apple. I'm dead serious, that's why.
Posted on Reply
#12
_JP_
dunnmelaniejLook is great.... But what extra features are there which makes it so expensive?
It is licensed to be installed/run on Apple hardware/software.

For example. My HD 5770 is worth below 70~80€, but if I were to flash it with an Apple-compatible BIOS (Because there was a 5770 Mac version), I could easily get +100€ for it.
Posted on Reply
#13
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Dj-ElectriCApple. I'm dead serious, that's why.
_JP_It is licensed to be installed/run on Apple hardware/software.

For example. My HD 5770 is worth below 70~80€, but if I were to flash it with an Apple-compatible BIOS (Because there was a 5770 Mac version), I could easily get +100€ for it.
From thisthread:
It is not created for apple fans. This product is made to comply with standards that apple holds for their products. That is what it is custom (compared to a normal card). What makes this card different is laid out in the article. It has firmware written specifically for Apple and has designed without powertune or boost and a tweaked PCB design. What makes this more expensive is the firmware.
It is a bit more than the logo and a custom BIOS.
Posted on Reply
#14
Ghost
That's one expensive firmware. Must be Mac® Edition.
Posted on Reply
#15
_JP_
FrickIt is a bit more than the logo and a custom BIOS.
Be that as it may, the standards Apple holds for their products and in this case, a graphics card, should be the same for any other graphics card. Sapphire is not going to assemble these in a completely different place. QC is pretty much standard throughout the whole industry (or do you think Intel quadruple-checks and bins processors for macs?). Those features were cut off for whatever reason, it is not a sign of quest for perfection or higher quality. Tweaked PCB designs are either to decrease its price or to cater OC fans and, like I said, the card's BIOS is to blame.
Posted on Reply
#16
tokyoduong
Apple is fashion, functionality and reliability. They were never about performance. The real deal is from an accounting and business model. Apple wants to make more money by keeping costs low. One of the biggest cost for any electronics producer is customer service (RMA, repairs, refunds, warranty service). It actually cost them more the product itself to have all these support for customers but you can't sell a product without customer service. So apple test and tune products to be reliable rather than more performance. Their performance is mostly from optimized codes than from boosting hardware. Since apple is pretty much a vertical monopoly, they have the option to reduce their customer service cost starting from the assembly line.

I dont understand why people are fine with paying premiums for performance but they whine about paying a premium for reliability. In fact, there's always been a much higher premium for reliability.
Posted on Reply
#17
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
tokyoduongApple is fashion, functionality and reliability. They were never about performance. The real deal is from an accounting and business model. Apple wants to make more money by keeping costs low. One of the biggest cost for any electronics producer is customer service (RMA, repairs, refunds, warranty service). It actually cost them more the product itself to have all these support for customers but you can't sell a product without customer service. So apple test and tune products to be reliable rather than more performance. Their performance is mostly from optimized codes than from boosting hardware. Since apple is pretty much a vertical monopoly, they have the option to reduce their customer service cost starting from the assembly line.

I dont understand why people are fine with paying premiums for performance but they whine about paying a premium for reliability. In fact, there's always been a much higher premium for reliability.
I have a 13" Macbook Air for work and despite having a 1.8Ghz dual-core i5 (ivb, 2.8Ghz turbo,) it's pretty responsive. The HD 4000 graphics is more than enough for work and HD video and its light and built solid. It's not flimsy, has a pretty nice display. Not to mention a couple USB 3.0 ports.

All I have to complain about apple is the price. Apple makes a good product and it doesn't need to be the fastest for it to do the job well. You don't need to overclock to have a machine do everything you want it to.

Go get an iMac with a 3770S and a 1440p display and tell me that it is slow and doesn't look nice.

The hardware is just as good as anything else, it's the price and the QA that Apple does with both the hardware and software together. By having a small set of devices Apple can tailor the OS to what it will be running on. Windows has to run on everything so it needs to be designed to run on everything.

All in all, Apple makes a good product, you just need to be prepared to pay out the nose for it because in all honesty, the OS X UI is clean, efficient, and just works and has worked for many years. Plenty of people will disagree with me and that's fine, but it's ignorant to say that Apple doesn't produce a good product.
Posted on Reply
#18
Octavean
Naturally, out of the Apple product lineup, only the Mac Pro would be able to accommodate this Sapphire HD 7950 Mac Edition card and such a Mac Pro would cost a minimum of $2500 new. The Mac Pro is a low volume high margin product (AKA anything but cheap) from a company that only holds a small fraction of the market (regardless of stock value and mindshare).

So Sapphire knows they can only sell a relatively small number of these (with respect to standard PC versions) added with whatever requirements / certification / expense they had to go through to adhere to Apple specs,....of course it would have to cost more.

I'm just a little surprised that it wasn't launched with a new Mac Pro.

Don't much care about color though. To me color is one of the most irrelevant features of computer hardware.
Posted on Reply
#19
tokyoduong
AquinusI have a 13" Macbook Air for work and despite having a 1.8Ghz dual-core i5 (ivb, 2.8Ghz turbo,) it's pretty responsive. The HD 4000 graphics is more than enough for work and HD video and its light and built solid. It's not flimsy, has a pretty nice display. Not to mention a couple USB 3.0 ports.

All I have to complain about apple is the price. Apple makes a good product and it doesn't need to be the fastest for it to do the job well. You don't need to overclock to have a machine do everything you want it to.

Go get an iMac with a 3770S and a 1440p display and tell me that it is slow and doesn't look nice.

The hardware is just as good as anything else, it's the price and the QA that Apple does with both the hardware and software together. By having a small set of devices Apple can tailor the OS to what it will be running on. Windows has to run on everything so it needs to be designed to run on everything.

All in all, Apple makes a good product, you just need to be prepared to pay out the nose for it because in all honesty, the OS X UI is clean, efficient, and just works and has worked for many years. Plenty of people will disagree with me and that's fine, but it's ignorant to say that Apple doesn't produce a good product.
so....you agree with me?
I pretty much stated that apple products look good, perform well, and are very reliable.
Posted on Reply
#21
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
That card is uber sexy. Why can't manufacturers make Windows versions that sexy? I would love a white and black Radeon, or hell even Nvidia card, to go along with my white Switch 810. White LEDs and that will be off the chain.
Posted on Reply
#22
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
tokyoduongso....you agree with me?
I pretty much stated that apple products look good, perform well, and are very reliable.
Yes, for the most part I was agreeing with you. I was disagreeing with this:
tokyoduongApple is fashion, functionality and reliability. They were never about performance.
Apple does have performance products, like an iMac with a 3770-S or the Mac Pro if you really want to empty your bank account. All in all, I think Apple covers all the bases, you just don't typically buy it because the price is way out in left field, it's not a gaming platform, and it's a lot harder to upgrade them now than they used to be and impossible with some products.

Also Apple doesn't need really fast machines to run their software well in a lot of cases. Since Apple keeps their own hardware on a tight leash, they can optimize the OS for a small set of hardware rather than everything which can reduce the footprint and improve performance.

All in all, Apple wasn't huge into performance because there is no money in it. They have several offerings but you need to really want them and have the money for them and in most cases it's not worth it, but that depends on how badly you want a Mac product over others.
Posted on Reply
#23
TheinsanegamerN
"This highly acclaimed architecture delivers a significant graphics performance boost for Mac Pro users in a wide range of applications including gaming, audio or video editing and content creation. For example, gaming frame rates are increased by over 200%, general benchmark performance increased by around 30% and graphics intensive benchmarks increased by as much as 300% compared with the NV 8800GT commonly used in these machines"

over the 8800gt? well, great. isnt that card 6 years old or something along those lines? have there really been NO cards released for mac os since the 8800? if so, i feel bad for mac users....
Posted on Reply
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