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Sep 02, 2023

iMac Pro prices, specs and features, from 18

Over the years, the iMac has gone from a candy-colored entry-level machine to one of the most powerful all-in-ones money can buy, but it's never quite been the best machine for professionals. But with the new iMac Pro unveiled at WWDC on Monday that's set to launch in December, that's all about to change. You can read about our first eyes-on impressions here, or keep reading for iMac Pro specs, features and pricing.

This new model isn't just a better version of the 27-inch model—it's both the most powerful Mac ever made and one of the most expensive. Seriously, it's as if the Mac Pro and the 27-inch iMac had a baby.

The new machine is dressed in a new sleek space-gray aluminum enclosure with a Magic Keyboard, Magic Trackpad 2, and Magic Mouse 2 to match. It comes with the same 5K screen as the regular 2017 iMac (also unveiled on Monday), but inside, it's been radically redesigned.

An all-new thermal design features a dual centrifugal fan system, which allows the machine to deliver up to 80 percent more cooling capacity than other models while still letting it operate just as quietly.

The iMac Pro has some serious thermal cooling going on.

Inside, you’ll get Intel Xeon processors up to 18 cores, a Radeon Pro Vega GPU with up to 11 teraflops of single-precision compute power for real-time 3D rendering and high-quality VR. The iMac Pro also supports up to 4TB of SSD, up to 128GB of ECC memory, and 10Gbit/s ethernet. You’ll also get four Thunderbolt 3 ports so you can connect two high-performance RAID arrays and two 5K displays (44 million pixels for those keeping score) at the same time.

All that power, however, comes at a pretty steep price.The new iMac Pro is available in a pretty hefty base configuration for—wait for it— a whopping $5,000. It will ship in December 2017, so you’ll have plenty of time to save.

Michael Simon has been covering Apple since the iPod was the iWalk. His obsession with technology goes back to his first PC—the IBM Thinkpad with the lift-up keyboard for swapping out the drive. He's still waiting for that to come back in style tbh.

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