The 64-bit "Nehalem" architecture is substantially faster and supports "Hyper-Threading" - which "allows two threads to run simultaneously on each core" (so MacOS X recognizes sixteen "virtual cores" on this model) - and "Turbo Boost" - which "automatically boosts the processor speed based on workload" (so if an application is only using one of the eight cores it will automatically increase the speed of the core in use and turn off the unused cores). Bluetooth 2.1+EDR is standard, AirPort Extreme (802.11g/n) is optional.Īlthough the "Nehalem" models look practically the same externally as the "Early" models, there are major technical differences. Ports include five USB 2.0 ports, four Firewire "800" ports, dual Gigabit Ethernet, and both a Mini DisplayPort and a dual-link DVI port, among others.
#4 core to 6 core mac pro serial#
īy default, it was configured with 6 GB of 1066 MHz DDR3 ECC SDRAM, a 640 GB (7200 RPM, 16 MB cache) 3Gb/s Serial ATA hard drive, an 18X dual-layer "SuperDrive" and an NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 with 512 MB of GDDR3 memory.Įxpansion includes two external 5.25" "optical" bays (one free by default), four internal 3.5" "cable-free, direct attach" hard drive bays (three free by default), and four PCIe 2.0 slots (one free PCIe 2.0 x16 slot and two free PCIe 2.0 x4 slots with the default single graphics card installed).
The Mac Pro "Eight Core" 2.26 (Nehalem) is powered by two 2.26 GHz Quad Core 45-nm Xeon E5520 (Nehalem) processors with a dedicated 256k of level 2 cache for each core and 8 MB of "fully shared" level 3 cache per processor.