Monday, July 23rd 2018
AMD EPYC Airport Ads Punch Close to the Belt
Airports are the latest battleground for AMD and Intel as the two vie to catch the attention of IT managers in the midst of an AI and big-data inflection point that promises to trigger a gold rush for enterprise processors. AMD took to San Jose International Airport with its latest AMD EPYC static ads targeted at IT managers stuck with Intel Xeon for its historic market leadership. AMD EPYC processors offer "more performance, more security, and more value" than Intel Xeon processors, the ads claim, but not before landing a mean punch in the general area of Intel's belt.
Source:
hellae (Reddit)
38 Comments on AMD EPYC Airport Ads Punch Close to the Belt
The whole thing has a nice touch of nostalgia with it, references to that are very effective in 'our' age group I think. If you're just new to the world or just came round for a couple of years, you can't appreciate it for what it really is. Most youngsters that entered the world post 2013 only know some vague stuff about FX being a CPU that sucked but beyond that... AMD is all about GPU for them. And even for them its a great move because it shows that AMD is here to play on the highest end of the CPU spectrum too.
"Come-on-Otto-that'll-be-our-motto"
Of course, the CTO lies by saying "I'm checking it out. We have an AMD rep coming out next week to run us through what they offer, sir."
CTO then scurries away and calls AMD and pleads with them to send a rep over ASAP.
If this scenario plays out just one time leading to an EPYC sale, all this advertisement is paid for many times over.
"Hey big spender! Dig this blender! Rainbow suspenders! He big spender!"
As for the advertisement, it's got you guys talking about it. That's the biggest thing right there, once people notice, getting them to talk about it. Seems like it's doing its job.
The advertising tenet you mention does not apply to a brand new product being introduced into a market, essentially, completely dominated by one product.
If nothing else, this ad campaign will lead to some asking "What is Epyc?". Might also lead to to questions like "What is Xeon?" and the IT person's response might be "Oh, Xeon is the overpriced unsecure crap we used to run our servers with. We're moving to Epyc now. Have you ever heard of that?"
The original inquired might respond "Hmmmm....Epyc, seems I recall seeing that name at the airport too."
There is a comparison on Today's Reviews
AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X vs. Intel Core i9-7960X TechGage
techgage.com/article/performance-face-off-amd-vs-intel-workstations/3/
You can read the article.
Test results show that, 16 Cores / 32 Threads AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X is as powerful as 16 Cores / 32 Threads Intel i9 7960X.
But AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X is $839.99 + $187.86 = $1.027,85
www.amazon.com/AMD-Threadripper-32-thread-Processor-YD195XA8AEWOF/dp/B074CBH3R4/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&qid=1531858579&sr=8-2&keywords=AMD+1950X&linkCode=sl1&tag=techgage-20&linkId=d836bd3e633977f4f53c072e68490c96
Intel i9 7960X is $1,435.40 + $90.55 = $1.525,95
www.amazon.com/Intel-Core-i9-7960X-Processors-BX80673I97960X/dp/B075XRYMDS/ref=as_li_ss_tl?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1531858747&sr=1-1&keywords=Intel%2BCore%2Bi9-7960X&linkCode=sl1&tag=techgage-20&linkId=c03f74edc810dcbc75602838885f90fe&th=1
Who wants to pay 50% more for the same performance?
Accept or not, Intel was the king of the processor industry but until Ryzen series arrived!
Now AMD has as good processors as Intel has. Hey I did not write on RGB mode. But why characters are in Blue and Red? :confused:
:roll:
I distinctly remember Intel's Core i7 adverts, where half of the content was filled with AMD's products. Oh wait, no I don't.