I'm not sure. Because the moment you enter the system room, the ecosystem is a completely different universe.
You can't easily sell "Good / Better / Best" version of a single model, and tell "These are the options, take it or leave it". Servers are customized to the screws they come with and are expanded throughout over the years. So, the logistics are somewhat different for these kinds of devices.
Plus, macOS is not a CLI first operating system for server operations, and macOS Server is not updated for some years. Allowing Linux would be a different offering, and allowing macOS to work with all kinds of hardware from ordinary Ethernet to 100G+ Ethernet and 400gbps Infiniband (plus all the other interconnects) will be a fun exercise in testing flexibility of both macOS and Apple development teams.
So it's quite complicated. All servers are built to order SKUs. Dell keeps configurations "per server" in their databases, for example. If you have a Dell server, enter its service tag to support site, and you'll get the configuration of the device as it left the factory.
They don't have to go all the way though and fully compete with Dell EMC/HPE. I'm not sure what the original commenter was thinking but in my mind they could simply sell a Mac Studio variant with dual PSUs, better networking, a rackmount chassis, etc. Basically have their existing consumer machine placed in a more datacenter friendly factor.
I mean places like Github and AWS are painfully racking up Mac Minis for their deployments and this theoretical server model would simplify everything. It also becomes an option for on premises AI inference using MLX, especially if they manage to get ANE support working in conjunction with the GPU for faster prefill.
The support and software stack for the server model would be the exact same as the consumer variant and they certainly wouldn't have special Linux offerings, Infiniband, and all that. If there's networking beyond their existing 10G it's going to be built into the board and they aren't going to support random 3rd party cards. The unit also doesn't need to be upgradable either.
You can't easily sell "Good / Better / Best" version of a single model, and tell "These are the options, take it or leave it". Servers are customized to the screws they come with and are expanded throughout over the years. So, the logistics are somewhat different for these kinds of devices.
Plus, macOS is not a CLI first operating system for server operations, and macOS Server is not updated for some years. Allowing Linux would be a different offering, and allowing macOS to work with all kinds of hardware from ordinary Ethernet to 100G+ Ethernet and 400gbps Infiniband (plus all the other interconnects) will be a fun exercise in testing flexibility of both macOS and Apple development teams.
So it's quite complicated. All servers are built to order SKUs. Dell keeps configurations "per server" in their databases, for example. If you have a Dell server, enter its service tag to support site, and you'll get the configuration of the device as it left the factory.