Yep. Final Cut Pro 8, plus Motion 6 (better known as AE), DVD Studio Pro 5 (better known as Encore), Soundtrack Pro 4 (better known as Audition, with the added benefit that it actually works), plus On Location, Photoshop, Illustrator, Adobe Media Encoder, Adobe Bridge, Dynamic Link, and a bunch of other very cool stuff and advanced features all running in 64 Bit = Final Cut Studio 4 (better known as Adobe Production Premium CS 5.5). Not to mention Color 2 (reportedly coming soon as SpeedGrade).
The next logical step would be to have a really fast new MacPro to run it all on. One with features like being able to upgrade the processor, full support for all manner of GPU cards including the Nvidia Tesla, inexpensive RAM, more than just 4 card slots, USB 3.0 ports built in, eSata ports built in, BluRay on board, all manner of card reader slots on board, etc.
About 12 months ago I never expected that I'd be saying this, but within 4 days from ordering, we picked up a custom-built and tuned PC last week with Windows 7 Ultimate, 2 Nvidia Quadros and 64 GB of RAM for about US$ 3K. We'll be upgrading the processor as soon as the new Intels are released and also pop in a Tesla or two (it holds up to 4). Meantime, after a week of testing and basic benchmarking, performance is already excellent and - surprise - Win7 Ultimate thus far is actually completely stable.
So, got a foot in both camps now and although we're still waiting for Apple to announce what they've decided to do with the MacPro, I think that it has probably fallen way too far behind for Apple to invest in making it competitive again. They've become far more succesful with other product offerings, which are focused largely on broad-based media delivery, than with computer hardware. The pro users, whose focus is on high-end media creation using a panoply of now platform-independent apps and tools (CS5.5, Smoke, DaVinci Resolve, Maya, Cinema 4D, V-Ray, to name a few) are of no real further concern.