APPLE
This iMac Pro server rack is both beautiful and powerful
With the iMac Pro potent enough to embarrass the Mac Pro – and Apple’s “trash can” computer not likely to see an update until next year – one company has taken the obvious next step and harnessed multiple all-in-ones into a server farm. MacStadium made headlines back in 2013 with its unusual rack-mounted Mac Pro arrays, demonstrating that just because Apple’s form-factor is atypical, that doesn’t mean it couldn’t be chained together for some seriously heavy workloads.
Now, it’s doing the same with the iMac Pro. It’s early days yet – the design hasn’t been finalized, apparently, and the company is still working out the lingering details – but the concept is pretty straightforward. Rather than a server made up of traditional 1U and 2U workstations, a custom rig holds multiple iMac Pro instead.It’s a clever solution from a company that has already demonstrated it has some imagination when it comes to irregularly-sized systems. MacStadium’s custom Mac Pro mounts tip the cylindrical computers on their side, locking them into a square chassis with a power supply and cooling. That then slides on a sled into a standard rack.
The challenge, of course, doesn’t stop at figuring out a neat way to build hardware into a server farm. Then you have to work out how to link it all up. In the case of the Mac Pro, MacStadium offers a rented array: you can basically develop for macOS on the computer as if it was local, but over an uncapped gigabit ethernet connection. We’re guessing MacStadium will be doing the same with the iMac Pro, offering a way to get the power of the all-in-one only without the not-inconsiderable outlay.
With even an entry-level example going for $4,999 – and a maxed-out iMac Pro coming in at over $13k – that’s a big consideration for those wanting to do macOS and iOS development on the latest hardware. MacStadium says it plans to open up its iMac Pro private cloud beta soon; no word yet on pricing.
Chris Davies
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