From the article there is a quote from Mark DeLoura (a former technical director at Ubisoft):
Game Daily: Will Apple ever get serious about games?
#1
Posted 18 January 2008 - 08:00 AM
From the article there is a quote from Mark DeLoura (a former technical director at Ubisoft):
#2
Posted 18 January 2008 - 08:25 PM
<-- Goes back to bed.
#3
Posted 19 January 2008 - 07:30 AM
And now, time for some Legend of Zelda.
#4
Posted 19 January 2008 - 09:35 AM
As for MacBooks? Now we have the MacBook Air, don't expect to see discrete graphics in MacBooks for the foreseeable future, if at all. Jobs won't want to jeopardize sales of the under-powered & expensive MBA by giving the far cheaper MacBook even better specs. AFAIC, there'll be nothing much doing game-wise from Apple any time soon.
#5
Posted 19 January 2008 - 11:02 AM
#6
Posted 19 January 2008 - 07:08 PM
Steve, if I want religious/morality police, I'll go to Saudi Arabia. Just give me the tools so I can do what I want to do on my Mac, and you can merrily do non-gaming things on your Mac, and we're all happy.
Chromium (MacBook Pro 08) – 2.6 GHz C2D T9500 / 4GB RAM / 750GB STX MomentusXT / GeForce 8600M GT 512MB
Antimony (PowerBook G4 Titanium) – 1.0 GHz PPC 7455 / 1GB RAM / 480GB OWC Mercury SSD / Radeon 9000 64MB
When there's a multiplayer version, I'm going to be on Frost's team. Well, except he doesn't seem to actually need a team...I mean, what's the point? "Hey look, it's Frost and His Merry Gang of Useless Hangers-On!" Or something.
#7
Posted 19 January 2008 - 09:32 PM
jackdawsson, on January 19th 2008, 11:35 AM, said:
As for MacBooks? Now we have the MacBook Air, don't expect to see discrete graphics in MacBooks for the foreseeable future, if at all. Jobs won't want to jeopardize sales of the under-powered & expensive MBA by giving the far cheaper MacBook even better specs. AFAIC, there'll be nothing much doing game-wise from Apple any time soon.
I absolutely agree with this. I wonder if anyone at Apple actually realizes how much $$$ they lose by not not offering decent graphics performance. I would likely have ordered the Air already if it had reasonable graphics performance. I would likely have a MacBook already as well. Why not go with a Pro? I absolutely don't want a machine that large. I want a small machine with decent graphics acceleration. The fact that my 12" PowerBook remains the single best solution for me at this point, even though it is so old, says a lot (of bad things) about Apple's current line of laptops... I don't expect top-tier performance, just something acceptable.
Performance on these integrated intel machines is also very bad in any application that makes use of many of Apple's new rendering technologies. Take a look at BareFeats and check out their non-gaming performance comparisons. You simply don't want an "integrated GPU" even if you don't run any games at all, since it has such a great impact on overall system performance.
#8
Posted 20 January 2008 - 06:54 AM
panjandrum, on January 19th 2008, 09:32 PM, said:
Performance on these integrated intel machines is also very bad in any application that makes use of many of Apple's new rendering technologies. Take a look at BareFeats and check out their non-gaming performance comparisons. You simply don't want an "integrated GPU" even if you don't run any games at all, since it has such a great impact on overall system performance.
I don't know if they really care. For all the awesome ideas they have, Apple as it currently stands is a means to reshape the computing world according to Steve Jobs' will. Unfortunately he has little tolerance for anything he doesn't do personally. It pains me to see how visionary they can be on some things yet completely short sighted on those that are more conventional.
#9
Posted 20 January 2008 - 08:44 AM
Frost, on January 20th 2008, 01:08 AM, said:
Part of it wonders if it has to do with game companies.
Remember what happened last time they made a major game announcement at a MacWorld, and a half-dozen big-name games were announced? How many of them actually came out?
(I bet he still holds a bit of a grudge.)
I'm guessing he mainly works now with companies he can *trust*, like iD or Blizzard.
#10
Posted 20 January 2008 - 09:19 AM
PMAvers162, on January 20th 2008, 03:44 PM, said:
"Gaming on a Mac is like women on the internet." — "Highly common and totally awesome?"
#11
Posted 21 January 2008 - 04:46 AM
They could also use a better gaming input API that's easier for developers to use. But I'm not holding my breath and I may end up building myself a new gaming PC and just using my Mac for the older titles that run well on it and other general purpose tasks. We could also use a good LIVE type multiplayer community app that integrates with the games with achievements, etc. Yeah I know about gameranger for multiplayer stuff but that's still not the same in my opinion. Making an upgradeable mid-range Mac tower also wouldn't hurt. But I don't see things changing anytime soon and if companies also see the mac as too small a market to bring most titles to then we wont be saying very many titles that PCs and consoles are all enjoying.
It gives me that sad empty feeling when I think about all the games the PC has that the Mac doesn't get.
It's obvious that Apple is way way way more serious about music and videos than they are about games. I think they probably begrudgingly put games onto the iPod. I certainly don't think them showing Rage and EA games at that one conference should be interpreted as them taking games seriously. Especially since they've had token game appearances at Macworlds before.
Alex Delarg, A Clockwork Orange said:
the Battle Cat said:
Late 2012 27 inch iMac, Core i7 Quad 3.4GHz, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 680MX 2GB, 3TB Hard Drive
#12
Posted 21 January 2008 - 11:38 PM
PMAvers162, on January 20th 2008, 08:44 AM, said:
Remember what happened last time they made a major game announcement at a MacWorld, and a half-dozen big-name games were announced? How many of them actually came out?
(I bet he still holds a bit of a grudge.)
I'm guessing he mainly works now with companies he can *trust*, like iD or Blizzard.
Jobs: "It's coming early next year from Bungie..."
Jones: *CRINGE*
Chromium (MacBook Pro 08) – 2.6 GHz C2D T9500 / 4GB RAM / 750GB STX MomentusXT / GeForce 8600M GT 512MB
Antimony (PowerBook G4 Titanium) – 1.0 GHz PPC 7455 / 1GB RAM / 480GB OWC Mercury SSD / Radeon 9000 64MB
When there's a multiplayer version, I'm going to be on Frost's team. Well, except he doesn't seem to actually need a team...I mean, what's the point? "Hey look, it's Frost and His Merry Gang of Useless Hangers-On!" Or something.
#13
Posted 22 January 2008 - 02:07 AM
But the purpose of such a machine would be ONLY for gamers. If not for games, and not a pro machine, a powerful GPU is useless. So I can understand why Apple choose not to sacrifice its iMac design for a GPU... except for gamers, nobody would care. Integrated GPU by Intel seem capable enough of running HD video.
As for a mid range tower, I am not sure it would work in Apple's interest, plus it doesn't fit in with Apple's philosophy. It could cannibalize Mac Pros, but most of all, Apple believes that
desktop home computer = iMac
desktop pro computer = Mac Pro
and there is no in between. The mac mini ? ahem, the little bastard child.
So the only feasible solution, seems to be for Apple to build an iMac computer "for gamers" :
the 24inch iMac with the 7600GT wasn't that far from being a gamer mac. But the current iMac with a Radeon 2600 was a big step back... let's hope for the next iMac revision.
#14
Posted 22 January 2008 - 02:36 AM
iRolley, on January 22nd 2008, 03:07 AM, said:
Well...the more CoreWhizbang stuff Apple puts into the OS itself, the more integrated GPUs become lacking. In the long run, it seems like it would be in Apple's best interest to drop them, unless they improve massively. Even the AppleTV doesn't have integrated graphics.
--Eric
#15
Posted 22 January 2008 - 02:47 AM
Eric5h5, on January 22nd 2008, 08:36 AM, said:
spot on, but the main reason why the aTV has a GPU is specifically to handle HD content. The processor is something like a 1.2Ghz Celeron combined with a 7300 Go I believe, both of which are heavily involved in the processing of HD as the requirements for quicktime to do that are along the lines of 2Ghz Pentium 4. It has a GPU out of necessity so that the overall heat profile of the machine is lower while still being able to handle all the 720p HD content you can throw at it. (actually I wonder if it can handle the notoriously power hungry .mkv)
the main reason that mac minis can play back HD content (mp4s are probably fine, but I suspect theyll struggle with .mkvs) is because they have relatively good CPUs. Not to mention that Apple's stuff only goes up to 720p.
Macbook Pro - C2D 2.4Ghz / 4GB RAM / Samsung 830 256GB SSD / Geforce 8600M GT 256Mb / 15.4"
Cube - G4 1.7Ghz 7448 / 1.5GB RAM / Samsung Spinpoint 250GB / Geforce 6200 256Mb
Self-built PC - C2Q Q8300 2.5Ghz / 4GB RAM / Samsung 830 256GB SSD / Radeon 7850 OC 1GB / W7 x64
and a beautiful HP LP2475w 24" H-IPS monitor
#16
Posted 22 January 2008 - 03:36 AM
teflon, on January 22nd 2008, 07:47 PM, said:

















