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Xserve 3,1 (2009)
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<blockquote data-quote="pigoo3" data-source="post: 1914705" data-attributes="member: 56379"><p><u>Here's what one of the Xserve models look like:</u></p><p>[ATTACH=full]36624[/ATTACH]</p><p>As can be seen they are very flat...and designed to be rack mountable.</p><p></p><p>Compared to a Mac Pro of the same vintage...they have similar max RAM, CPU cores, CPU performance, and optical drive. Biggest differences from a Mac Pro is they have a "very weak" video card (just enough for occasional hookup to a display for diagnostic & maintenance purposes). Usually they would be run "headless" (no display).</p><p></p><p>Xserve's are definitely built for purposes that mainly involve CPU processes...not GPU purposes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pigoo3, post: 1914705, member: 56379"] [U]Here's what one of the Xserve models look like:[/U] [ATTACH type="full"]36624[/ATTACH] As can be seen they are very flat...and designed to be rack mountable. Compared to a Mac Pro of the same vintage...they have similar max RAM, CPU cores, CPU performance, and optical drive. Biggest differences from a Mac Pro is they have a "very weak" video card (just enough for occasional hookup to a display for diagnostic & maintenance purposes). Usually they would be run "headless" (no display). Xserve's are definitely built for purposes that mainly involve CPU processes...not GPU purposes. [/QUOTE]
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