Apple Mac Pro A1481 Cylinder 12 Core Xeon E5-2697 v2 64GB RAM 1TB SSD Dual D700
CPU: 2.7GHz Intel 12 Core Xeon
Storage: 1TB SSD
Memory(RAM): 64GB
GPU: AMD FirPro D700 6GB Dual
Monterey OSX
About this mac:
There is no mistaking the "Late 2013" Mac Pro models for earlier ones as
they present an Apple described "radical" departure from the large,
highly expandable tower case design of yore and instead feature a
compact dark gray, glossy cylinder design that is approximately one
eighth of the mass but has limited internal expansion.
Apple
explains that these "Space Gray" cylinder Mac Pro models are "designed
around an innovative unified thermal core" and have not only faster
processors than earlier models but also dual workstation class graphics
processors, faster memory, and faster PCIe 2.0 x4 flash storage. Instead
of internal expansion, the system provides extensive high speed ports
for external connectivity options.
The Mac Pro "Twelve Core" 2.7 (Late 2013) is a "configure-to-order" configuration of either the Mac Pro "Quad Core" 3.7 (Late 2013), Mac Pro "Six Core" 3.5 (Late 2013), or Mac Pro "Eight Core" 3.0 (Late 2013).
However, note that the "Quad Core" model was discontinued and the
"Eight Core" model only became a standard configuration possible to
custom configure on April 4, 2017. Other than processor, this model can
be identical to the stock models.
The Mac Pro "Twelve Core" 2.7 (Late 2013) is powered by a single 2.7 GHz Twelve Core
22-nm Xeon E5-2697v2 processor with a dedicated 256k of level 2 cache
for each core and 30 MB of level 3 "Smart Cache." If otherwise equipped
as the default models, this configuration has 12 GB or 16 GB of 1866 MHz
DDR3 ECC SDRAM, a 256 GB SSD, and dual AMD FirePro D300, D500, or D700 graphics processors with 2 GB, 3 GB, or 6 GB of GDDR5 memory each, respectively.
Connectivity includes six
Thunderbolt 2 ports, one HDMI 1.4 UltraHD port, 4 USB 3.0 ports, and
Dual Gigabit Ethernet ports in addition to 802.11ac and Bluetooth 4.0.
Originally, this model reportedly supported as many as three 4K displays or six Thunderbolt displays.
However, on June 16, 2015, without updating the graphics cards
themselves, Apple quietly increased the official support to as many as
three 5K displays (5120x2880) -- two using Thunderbolt 2 ports and one
using the HDMI port. The support for as many as six 2560x1600 displays
using all six Thunderbolt 2 ports remained unchanged.