Thanks for the tale! This is a pretty low baller move from such a premium
company. I bet some apple fanbois won't know why it's slower. It's a wise
choice to let 0.1Ghz go for a significant I/O advantage, because often
that's the real bottleneck.
On Apr 15, 2016 8:32 PM, "Curt Lundgren" <[email protected]> wrote:

> My boss Chris picked up a Retina 27" iMac for my use last year.  The 5k
> display is awesome, particularly when rendering small size italic text.
> Deep color doesn't hurt either, and the best part for me is the ability to
> have an xterm open with 120 rows of text that aren't too small to read.
> I've had a 27" iMac at home with the 'standard' 2560x1440 display at home,
> beautiful display.  Yet, look at that small text, looks blocky…
>
> One of the best features on the work computer is the Fusion drive.  It's a
> combination of a standard SATA drive and a fast SSD on the PCIe bus.
> Apple's CoreStorage presents the pair to the operating system as a single
> volume.  It automagically migrates the most often used files to the faster
> storage.  Bootup is fast, application loading is fast, and so on.  I use
> Microsoft Word for Mac as an example of bloatware - it loads and is ready
> for use in under a second.
>
> Well, who wouldn't want such a machine?  It runs Unix, is very
> Linux-friendly - and every once in a while it's fun to watch a 4K YouTube
> video just to enjoy the display.  I spend hours mangling Perl code at the
> computer and generally approve of its features.  Save your pennies, get the
> computer.  I ordered a 3.2 GHz Core i5 unit with the same 1 TB Fusion
> drive.  It arrives, I set it up, looks fantastic; I bring it home.  Lucky
> thing I looked at System Information.  After the initial shock, some
> research.  It seems that around August Apple chose to reduce the size of
> the SSD from 120 GB to 23-1/2 GB.  Without telling anyone, let's cut the
> capacity by more than a factor of five.  Something stinks here, and the
> smell is coming from Cupertino.
>
> After a few discussion with Apple I picked up the 3.3 GHz model with the 2
> TB Fusion drive - this one actually has the 120 GB SSD.  Meanwhile, some
> performance metrics…
>
> I thought there would be no observable difference between a 3.2 GHz
> computer and a 3.3 GHz computer.  Indeed there are.  Since I'd invested a
> full day in setting things up on the 3.2 GHz unit, I used Super Duper to
> copy an image of the OS onto a 2 TB drive, using USB 3.0.  Very impressive
> performance - 105 MB/sec sustained performance.
>
> The 3.3 GHz unit comes home, now the imaging is set up in the other
> direction.  Wow, it sustains 150 MB/sec transfer speed going onto the
> system disk.  I am impressed!  I had been doing SCP file transfers from the
> older 2.7 GHz iMac.  With the 3.2 GHz iMac the speed was about 90 MB/sec -
> and that's doing encryption/decryption on the files of course.  I did the
> same transfers with the 3.3 GHz unit, seeing some sustained 103 MB/sec
> transfers.  I've never seen SCP run this fast.
>
> The swap of the 3.2 GHz unit for the faster one with the 'real' Fusion
> drive coat $175, more or less - well worth it.  But if you like Macs and
> think the 1 TB Fusion drive is a good idea, you may wish to reconsider.
>
> Curt
>
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