Friday, May 13th 2022
AMD Pushes Highest x86 Market Share in History in 1Q2022
AMD has been on a roll ever since it launched its first generation Zen core, which brought a much-needed performance and efficiency boost that finally brought a level of competitiveness against Intel's offerings. Years of iterations and design improvements have only increased AMD's value proposition towards consumers and businesses. A testament to that fact is that AMD in Q1 2022 hit its largest market share in history.
According to market analysis firm Mercury Research, AMD's offerings have continued to claw back market share from Intel, despite its strong recovery in performance and efficiency metrics following the debut of the 12th Gen Intel CPU family, Alder Lake. The firm places AMD's overall x86 market share for 1Q 2022 (including IoT and SoCs such as the ones found in the latest gaming consoles) at a record-breaking 27.7%, up 2.1% QoQ and a staggering 7% YoY. The server side of the equation has seen less stellar gains, but still increased by 0.9% QoQ, and 2.7% YoY, achieving a high of 11.6% share against Intel's decades-long market stranglehold.AMD's desktop CPU share did take a small hit compared to last year, according to the publication. Likely caused by Intel's market and technological resurgence with Alder Lake, AMD still achieved a 2.1% market share increase QoQ, placing it within 1% of its 1Q2021 high of 19.3% market share. Mobile has seen the seocnd largest increase in AMD's market share, with the company achieving a 0.9% increase QoQ (up to 22.5% share) and a significant 4.4% increase YoY.
Sources:
via TechSpot, Mercury Research
According to market analysis firm Mercury Research, AMD's offerings have continued to claw back market share from Intel, despite its strong recovery in performance and efficiency metrics following the debut of the 12th Gen Intel CPU family, Alder Lake. The firm places AMD's overall x86 market share for 1Q 2022 (including IoT and SoCs such as the ones found in the latest gaming consoles) at a record-breaking 27.7%, up 2.1% QoQ and a staggering 7% YoY. The server side of the equation has seen less stellar gains, but still increased by 0.9% QoQ, and 2.7% YoY, achieving a high of 11.6% share against Intel's decades-long market stranglehold.AMD's desktop CPU share did take a small hit compared to last year, according to the publication. Likely caused by Intel's market and technological resurgence with Alder Lake, AMD still achieved a 2.1% market share increase QoQ, placing it within 1% of its 1Q2021 high of 19.3% market share. Mobile has seen the seocnd largest increase in AMD's market share, with the company achieving a 0.9% increase QoQ (up to 22.5% share) and a significant 4.4% increase YoY.
51 Comments on AMD Pushes Highest x86 Market Share in History in 1Q2022
I guess it's all still relative and once you factor in motherboard, CPU, and cooler Alder Lake is still worse peformance/$ at almost every price point.
Raptor Lake: 24 cores (8 P and 16 E) / 32 threads;
Raphael: 16 cores (16 P) / 32 threads.
People even say that Zen 5 will be the last Zen because it is already an outdated micro-architecture, and AMD will eventually license ARM cores for Apple chiplets...
Whatever the perf/$ is, i don't regret picking ADL. It never cost me anything and at the time ADL seemed like a pretty good performing setup. I am not adverse to switching to Zen 5 though, but probably not going to be a beta tester like i did with ADL though even though i have had zero problems with ADL
Its interesting you call them corrupt customers, so they're in the Fanboi category?:D
All that disgusts me, as an enterprise customer.
Even though 12th Gen Intel is a great product, AMD products are still competitive, which helps for mindshare. AMD is no longer seen as the sub-quality brand, and is getting more visibility in pre-built systems and getting put in higher-end premium products. This all bodes well for the industry overall. If AMD keeps its momentum, there may be even more parity in the market, which of course will drive innovation. For us the consumers, this is a win!
As far as the server side goes, minds are much more closed to options in that space. Any growth by AMD can be seen as a win for the company. While it may take a long time, it could be a matter of one major adoption for the floodgates to open. AMD will have to prove they can provide the units required though, and since they are tied to fabs that are currently operating at capacity and cannot easily ramp up production, it will likely be some time before they can make serious moves.
With the energy crisis in Europe, I expect it may accelerate as AMD is more energy efficient.
A VPS provider I use is moving their entire stock to AMD. Hetzner also increasing AMD presence as well.
RDNA3 and Zen 4 coming this year is an indication of things to come. We get some hints in Lisa Su's remarks that she expects 2022 to be their best year yet. So far, she's been right on the money and AMD has executed flawlessly. We won't have too much longer to wait. I'll be sitting pat on my AM4 3900X & 6900 XT, though, for a while. I may update a CPU, maybe.
www.guru3d.com/news-story/amd-zen-4-cpu-with-5-2-ghz-boost-and-rdna-2-igpu-surfaces,5.html first look is nice, imo. And this is only talking about MHz in an engineering sample; don't know anything yet about the certain IPC improvements. Going to be a great year!
All that aside, I think it would be better for everyone if AMD/Intel both hovered around 50/50 market share for cpus consumer and enterprise.
What is the fourth segment that makes up the difference, is it game consoles?
I can tell you my Dell R6515 run like a clock, i only had one server with faulty dimm and motherboard was replaced, that is it.
Hosting around 3k vms with no issues.