Support for mac pro

I am told that Apple is not supporting Mac Pro from now on
If this short-sighted abandoning of the professional creative communities is true, what recommendations are there for bullet proof Mac systems from 2012 onwards?
Picture editors, recording and post production studios, design studios, composers all need a top end machine with an open architecture and no 'designed-in' constraints which feature on all other current Macs.
Are we back with the build your own approach of a PC?
Any insights welcome
Ian

there are good reasons for wanting to sustain and renew Mac Pro systems.
And that is exactly what will happen.
Power: Although the iMac is an extremely powerful machine in its own right, the Mac Pro's performance still kicks the iMac's butt all the way up and down the block. Benchmark performance in Geekbench shows the 12-core 2.93 GHz Mac Pro coming in with an astounding score of 21,789. That's nearly twice the 11,581 score earned by the most powerful iMac, a quad-core 3.4 GHz model.
Benchmarks only tell part of the story, however. A Mac Pro that's been maxed-out on Apple's online store with as much RAM and hard disk capacity as you can shove into it is a Godzilla of a machine:
    •    Two 2.93 GHz 6-Core Intel Xeon processors (for a total of 12 cores)
    •    8 TB of internal storage
    •    64 GB of RAM
    •    Two ATI Radeon HD 5770 with 1 GB of video RAM -- each.
The best you can do with an iMac via Apple's configuration options?
    •    3.4GHz Quad-Core Intel Core i7
    •    2 TB HDD + 256 GB SSD
    •    16 GB RAM
    •    AMD Radeon HD 6970M with 2 GB of video RAM
The top-end iMac is an incredibly powerful machine by consumer and even professional standards, but a fully-upgraded Mac Pro is practically ostentatious in the amount of raw processing power it can wield. Professional consumers in areas like 3D rendering, video editing, and other extremely processor-intensive applications surely appreciate the much greater power the Mac Pro can afford them.
Customization:
The Mac Pro stomps the iMac in the customization department. Folding down the Mac Pro's side door gives you easy and almost instant access to its innards, and virtually every component is simple to swap out. Hard drives in particular are extraordinarily easy to swap in the Mac Pro.
Contrast that with the iMac, where the RAM is essentially the only user-serviceable component. Swapping out the hard drive on an iMac is a harrowing procedure that requires removing the entire front display -- not something you're going to want to do more than once, if ever. You could argue that the iMac's Thunderbolt capability vastly expands its customization options (and I will, later on), but it still doesn't quite measure up to the amount of customization available to a Mac Pro.

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