desktop suggestions....

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by dlevy, Feb 28, 2008.

  1. dlevy

    dlevy Guest

    Hey, what's the latest hot machine? I can spend up to 6k.
     
    dlevy, Feb 28, 2008
    #1
  2. dlevy

    Bo Guest

    Bo, Feb 28, 2008
    #2
  3. dlevy

    Sasquatch Guest

    do you load windows on the intel mac to run solidworks? does that slow
    down the performance running in PC- mode or is it fine with
    solidworks?
     
    Sasquatch, Feb 29, 2008
    #3
  4. dlevy

    Dale Dunn Guest

    The Mac's Radeon video card is unsupported for SW. You'll get less
    support from the VAR than usual. Furthermore, 8 cores is a waste if
    you're only running SW. Buying a Mac just to run SW can't be a serious
    suggestion. The Mac may be a superior platform in general, but it's just
    wrong for SW.

    If you want to buy a pre-built box without thinking too hard about
    tailoring it to your actual usage, I'd recommend having a look at the
    SPECapc benchmark results for SolidWorks:

    http://www.spec.org/gwpg/apc.data/specapc_sw2005_summary.html

    Looks like the Dell 690 with the Xeon 5160 and Quadro 3500 is the fastest
    they have on record at the moment. For almost the same performance, you
    can nearly get a pair of Dell 390s for $6000. I think I'd spec the 690
    and the 30" monitor. Maybe a pair of 24" monitors. Stay with XP pro for
    now. Either of these will run SW at a speed on par with the Mac, but with
    better, more stable graphics.
     
    Dale Dunn, Feb 29, 2008
    #4
  5. dlevy

    dvanzile3 Guest

    Go with a Appro XtremeWorkstation WH5548H ....

    I'd start with 4 to 8 gigs of ram with a 64-bit OS of course. And in
    1 or 2's years time, Solidworks and many
    more apps will be more and more multi-threaded and really put all 16
    of those processsor cores to work!
    Also, after that time period, you could expand that 4\8 gigs fo ram to
    128 gigs. You'll need it when windows 7 is released.

    Don
     
    dvanzile3, Feb 29, 2008
    #5
  6. dlevy

    dlevy Guest

    Thanks!

     
    dlevy, Mar 1, 2008
    #6
  7. dlevy

    Bo Guest

    Obviously, there are options to put in whatever graphic card you want
    in a Mac., and there is one reasonable priced NVIDIA card and several
    other Radeons.

    NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512MB

    I wouldn't necessarily discount Apple. The base price Mac Pro Quad
    Core 2.8 GHz starts just under $2500, & ramps up depending on all the
    options, just like Dell, HP and the rest.

    A DELL 690 starts @ $1700, & quickly blows past $4000, but I haven't
    tried to do a literal comparison between nearly identically equipped
    Mac & Dell workstations.

    Wonking out on one brand versus another without a hard look may
    shortchange you on what you might be able to do.

    I don't say Mac is the right choice, but just one of many good ones.
    I personally don't run Swks on a desktop, but I do run SolidWorks on
    my Mac Laptop, and it suits my needs now.

    Bo
     
    Bo, Mar 2, 2008
    #7
  8. Don't speak if you don't know.
    There is no "PC-mode". You install Windows as you would on any other
    PC and the workstation behaves exactly as a Dell or HP or whatever.
    The performance is the same as an identical-specd Dell or HP or
    whatever.
    -Marc
     
    marc gibeault, Mar 8, 2008
    #8
  9. Agreed that going with the Radeon is a poor choice, as would choosing
    an NVS with a Dell, but why you would do that?
    Just spec the Quadro card with the Mac, fastest processor, with 4GB or
    8GB RAM, two fast disks, add WinXP x64, and you get a screamer for
    around $800 les than an identically-speced Dell.

    -Marc
     
    marc gibeault, Mar 8, 2008
    #9
  10. dlevy

    ChamberPot Guest

    Jesus, how many lies from Mac apologists do we have to endure?

    "You install Windows as you would on any other PC" EXCEPT that it
    requires other software to run the OS because the Mac mother board
    prevents it from working like "any other PC". Running Windows on a Mac
    is NOT just like a dual boot, because a real PC dual boot does not
    require Bootcamp or Parallels equivalents. You can install Windows and
    Linux on a Dell or HP without a chip on the motherboard interfering.

    Also, you can't really spec a Mac the same as a Dell or HP, because the
    real PCs have a huge number of options that the Mac doesn't. Go to the
    Mac configurator website to confirm this for yourself. When you are
    done, the Mac will cost you significantly more, and if it is a laptop,
    you STILL may not be able to get a machine that is certified to run SW.

    Mac shit is over hyped, over priced and under optioned. Steve Jobs is an
    unrepentent communist. If you buy any of his crap you are a brainless sheep.

    Daisy.
     
    ChamberPot, Mar 8, 2008
    #10
  11. dlevy

    Bo Guest

    For a quick note regarding what Harry Sasquatch may have been
    referring to, I'll offer a quick note from the SolidWorks crew at the
    recent MD&M show.

    One of the SolidWorks presenters of demos noted he was using
    SolidWorks 2008 on XP Pro on his MacBook Pro Laptop in the
    virtualization program Parallels. That may be what S. was referring
    to as PC-mode. I haven't done SWks inside XPPro in Parallels, but
    have done XP Pro Loaded native, and SWks 2006 runs fine for me on a
    MacBook Pro. I would expect running in Parallels might be paying a
    slight speed penalty, but don't know how much.

    Other users have reported surprisingly good speeds from Parallels & XP
    Pro.

    Bo
     
    Bo, Mar 8, 2008
    #11
  12. Miss Daisy,

    Have you actually ever tried all this?
    I initally configured a Dell workstation and then went to the Apple
    Store to compare prices. I was lucky that all the parts I wanted were
    offered as options (latest gen. Xeon 3.0GHz, Quadro 5600 1.5GB).
    I agree I have to do some work, namely install Windows myself. That
    may be too much for you dear Daisy but I kind of like that because I
    get a clean installation without all that Dell/HP/Lenovo crap they
    install.
    Yes I have a machine based on EFI instead of a BIOS and that is
    different. If you find that too extreme, fine, never buy a Mac and in
    a few years when all PCs will come with EFI hang onto your 2010-era
    Dell, it will be the last of it's kind.
    And Job is quite a communist: http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2007/fortune/0711/gallery.power_25.fortune/
    Looks like American capitalism at its best to me!

    -Marc
     
    marc gibeault, Mar 8, 2008
    #12
  13. dlevy

    ChamberPot Guest


    Yeah, well, it is both convenient and lucky that you wanted a Quadro
    5600, because it is the ONLY SW compatible video card you can get with
    the Mac, and by the way it DOUBLES the price of the machine. Same with
    the Xeon's because most PC users are not clammoritng for Xeons (not to
    mention being forced into 8 of them), but it is the only thing the4 mack
    offers, so you're stuck with very high price "options" which are not
    really ioptions at all. Its the only shit you can get from the Mac site.
    How can yuou defend such a bisarre combination of crap that SW users in
    general for do not ask for or recommend?

    Limited options at an elevated price, and a motherboard that
    intentionally limits the OS you can use as well as an OS that cannot be
    installed on non-mac mobo sounds like totalitarian control, and that the
    Soviets have invaded Cupertino to me.

    Different? Not just differemt, but confined to the Mac way of doing it.
    Every bit as dispicable as Microsoft. Special software to allow other
    OSes? Any version of Windows or Linux requires no such "different"ness.
    Stop defending this mass enforcer.

    Daisy.
     
    ChamberPot, Mar 8, 2008
    #13
  14. dlevy

    Bo Guest

    Daisy, with all the negatives you put out, I am astonished you can get
    up in the morning and have any energy left to get to work.

    It is just a computer. It is not Russia in the 80s where you couldn't
    get them or if you did you had only one choice.

    Choices to day are good, and it forces all the other players to keep
    up or come up with something new & BETTER.

    "confined to the Mac way of doit it" doesn't seem like what I see,
    since I can run nearly any practical OS I want to run on my Mac, if I
    really have a need to do it. No one forced me to buy a Mac, and I
    don't force anyone to do so either. Choice works real well,
    particularly when the customer is informed. It is not a war.

    Life is good - Bo
     
    Bo, Mar 9, 2008
    #14
  15. Daisy,

    We're here to get you. You have nowhere left to go. You should
    surrender before it's too late.

    Wroouaah!

    -Marc
     
    marc gibeault, Mar 10, 2008
    #15
  16. dlevy

    Cliff Guest

    Clueless jb first <G>.
    But I also like UNIX boxen. Don't know Macs though. Too
    artsy-craftsie back in the day.
     
    Cliff, Mar 10, 2008
    #16
  17. dlevy

    ChamberPot Guest

    The french? Out to "get" someone? Bullshit. Oooh, I'm all a-twitter.
    That's why you fags like the mac so much - theyr for losers. Plus, the
    french do love theyr socialists. US should have let France become South
    Germany (twice). You know what they say, it's not a war until France
    surrenders.

    Daisy.
     
    ChamberPot, Mar 10, 2008
    #17
  18. dlevy

    Bo Guest

    French Roast, french kiss
     
    Bo, Mar 14, 2008
    #18
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.