It should come as no surprise that the entry-level Mac Pro didn’t perform as well as the high-end $3999 stock Mac Pro, which was 11 percent faster overall.
MathematicaMark was 55 percent faster, iPhoto was 34 percent faster, and the PCMark Office suite score on a Parallels Windows 8 virtual machine was 78 percent as high as the 2012 Mac Pro. The PCIe-connected flash storage was able to copy 6GB of data in less than 25 seconds, while the old Mac Pro took two minutes and 27 seconds. The new Mac Pro was faster across the board, but graphics tests really stood out, with frame rates in the high-resolution Heaven and Valley benchmark 10 times as high as the 2012 Mac Pro. Reference models in italics.-Macworld Lab testing by James Galbraith and Albert FiliceĬompared to the previous entry-level Mac Pro, a mid-2012 model with a quad-core Intel Xeon running at 3.2GHz, a 1TB hard drive, 6GB of RAM, and an ATI Radeon HD 5770 video card with 1GB of video RAM, the late 2013 Mac Pro was 77 percent faster, overall. Our review of the 3.0GHz 8-core Mac Pro has the details on the design, features, and usability of the Mac Pro. The new Mac Pro also comes with dual gigabit ethernet ports and 802.11ac wireless networking. The Mac Pro relies on six Thunderbolt 2 ports and four USB 3.0 ports for additional storage and other devices. It has the same amount of internal flash storage as a laptop and no available PCI slots for expansion cards. While Apple offers two stock configurations, the new Mac Pro is really meant to be customized at the time of purchase.