MacOS is not important anymore. With Windows 10 including Linux Subsystem support it's the way to go. I don't use MacOS as my main anymore, I only use macOS for light duty computing. Apple is all about control, they want to control everything that runs on their hardware and keep every dollar...
Gigabyte z87x-d3h, with a 4770 CPU or 4670. I could do it in my sleep. Simple install with Unibeast and the audio, video, and network all easily handled with Multibeast. You can upgrade to a Haswell 4790k. I don't think there's such thing as future proof. It will get alteast 5+ years of OSX...
There really no such thing as a "reliable" hackintosh. There always will be some issue one day that you need to manage. If you don't have the stomach to deal with simple troubleshooting don't build a hack. Plenty of cheap reliable used Macs on ebay.
What Apple shown was Skylake X, not I9 CPUs. I'm rocking dual 8 core Xenon CPUs that works easily without much effort for 1/2 the price of any Skylake or Kabylake setups. Why bother with the latest and greatest PC masters race. Compatibility > raw performance.
Consider Apple's USB implementation is more proprietary than Windows, it won't be easy to get full native USB-C working without some hacking.
You can forget about TB3 for now because Apple's TB driver is much different than Windows. I love using TB on a Mac but I hate using it on a Hackintosh...
ECC is a negative because, it will cost more and higher latency. When's the last time memory ever died on a server while it's powered? ECC is highly overrated.
There's no native support for Kaby Lake CPUs, means that you will run into issues and have to use Safe mode until you have a proper custom DSDT file for the CPU. So right there I don't think you will have success easily.
2nd, you mention Boot OSX from USB. If you read the Guide here, then...
Need more info on the hardware, CPU and motherboard model. If you have a dedicated video card it is not a good idea for a new install and someone without experience. Use the Intel integrated video to install OSX and later you can put the video card in when you have a working system.
I've had AMD GPU with 4 video outputs all Displayport, assuming they all work. It will only take 2 cards to get 8 outputs. Many of the 280X, 390X have 4 ports and you can run in pairs assuming you get a motherboard that can fit 2-3 full size cards.
So much easier to get a Synology 8 bay NAS server and put all your drives in it and create shared folders on the network. So easy to upgrade drives on a NAS too. The OP should invest in moving your data out of local drives. You have no data loss prevention. If either of your drive dies you...
http://www.fcp.co/forum/hardware/18250-brucex-try-this-new-final-cut-pro-x-benchmark?start=440
Take a look at this and see the most recent messages. You can buy AMD R9 280X that beats Nvidia 980GTX Ti.
For FCPX, Nvidia are not the best cards. AMD based cards better, heck even an old HD7970 does FCPX better than most of newer Nvidia cards. The more video ram the better too.
OSX can have multiple graphics cards but it doesn't really do much good other than giving you more video ports. Very few OSX apps can use multi-GPU and I don't think FCPX is multi-GPU aware. Adobe Premiere can.
The best advice for you is to never try to build with the latest and greatest hardware, you'll have nothing but headache with workarounds unless you find a golden build and use that hardware list.
Depend what you need TB3 for, I find it too pricey and difficult to make it work properly unless your work absolutely need it. The cost of TB devices also makes the setup expensive. I had an e-SATA drive bay that handle 4 drives and connect to OSX just fine and gives me 6Gbps speed that's...
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