ttrw wrote:I'm going to call your bluff on this one because I don't think that the Mac Mini has a 'very limited' graphics capability. On the contrary, my Father's partner is a graphics designer, and she has just bought a Mac mini to compliment her existing G4 Aluminium Powerbook!
My wife has an iMac 17" with a core duo 2 processor, and it runs VC in my experience, better than this MBP! (same graphics card as the Mac Mini!!!)
Next year Apple will introduce Snow Leopard. This new OS will be optimised for Intel Macintosh's and that includes much improved graphics ability. If you buy a G5, you will not get this performance boost. In fact I bet that you will get frustrated with your G5's speed anyway, because the system buss on the G5 is only around 167MHz, the Mac Mini being a lot faster (667MHz?).
If you still want to upgrade, consider getting an iMac with a core duo 2 in it. These are exceptionally good bargains.
The Mac Mini is fine for 2D with its integrated graphics, which actually uses main memory, and it is faster than a G4 Powerbook, but for 3D, rendering and especially assemblies, performance is marginal.
I have a Mac Mini 1.83 Ghz, 2GB and I have a Pentium 4 PC, 3.4Ghz and 2GB with a workstation card (FireGL X3-256, last of the AGP cards), and the difference is quite pronounced. At this point in time, the G5 would be an improvement, but I would consider it only a transition machine until the Nehalem machines and Snow Leopard arrives.
Nehalem introduces completely new memory architecture (conceptually like AMD's Hyperchannel), and performance over existing Mac Pro's might be up 50% and possibly more based on some preliminary benchmarks (which really comes down to Apple's Grand Central and OpenCL, and application adoption).
Were Tim to implement all of the technologies of Snow Leopard (and Lightworks), I would expect that the Mac Pro platform would have a decided edge over a similar Vista workstation running ViaCAD/Shark.
Farther out, we may be looking at a 64 bit, dual socket, 16 core machine supporting 32 threads, plus the bonus of full GPU (in multiples no less) support for graphics and general purpose computing. Everything else aside, that's some serious rendering capability.
The first Nehalem's are end of the year, Snow leopard most likely this time next year.
tom