Even if Piledriver is a "Sandy Bridge Killer", the problem will be in the fact that it took them almost 2 years to get it out. Keep in mind, Sandy Bridge has been out for a year at this point, and Piledriver won't be out until the middle/end of this year. Intel is in a great position to counter anything AMD throws at them.
Unfortunately I have to agree with you, once again Intel has the resources to do this. AMD's resources are spread pretty thin, and unless AMD can pull a rabbit out of their hat, it's going to be very hard to dethrone Intel.
I also don't understand why it keeps being speculated whether or not Zambezi was intended to be a "Server CPU" or "Server-Oriented", when they still marketed it as an Enthusiast CPU. You don't compare an FX-8150 to a 990X unless you're trying to say it can compete in that segment, just like you wouldn't compare a Motorcycle to a Car.
Zambezi wasn't designed as a server chip, it was designed to handle heavily threaded tasks and be able to still do things at the same time. Have you tried to play a video game and encode video at the same time on BD? Have you checked out how many free CPU resources BD has when you play a game? I bet not, but I agree, you can't compare the 990x and 3960x to the FX-8150. AMD might call it "enthusiast," but you have to understand that the market it is targeting is different. It's like the difference between a Honda Accord and a Dodge Viper SRT-10. It might be faster but you're paying 4 times more for it.
Once again everyone is ignoring what bulldozer is good at, multi-tasking and multi-threading. Maybe some multi-threaded benchmarks where different tasks are performed at the same time would show where BD can flex its muscles.
Now I'm just playing devils advocate, don't rip my head off for defending AMD, because AMD is a good company and they really are trying. Give it time, and don't forget, AMD isn't solely a CPU vendor so they have time to improve the architecture. As threading becomes more prevalent being able to squeeze more cores in the same area will be more useful than a higher IPC, because clocks can only go so high when using Si. Not to say IPC isn't important, but more "cores" can improve performance much more in applications that can utilize it.
Stop looking in the past and look at the future. Multi-core systems are everywhere and software vendors will want to take advantage of that. Also notice the i7 2600k's performance and the 2500k's performance. HyperThreading doesn't give you nearly a full core worth of performance, Bulldozer scales almost
LINEARLY.
If AMD can work out the branch predictor issues and latency issues on the cache, it will be a very worth while platform for the price.
Edit: ...and Xeno, I'm not disagreeing with you, I completely agree. I'm just tired of people bashing Bulldozer where it really isn't a bad platform, there just isn't enough software to take advantage of it yet. A great example would be video encoding on 8 cores, it will keep up with the 2600k no problem.