Source was metioned in an earlier post:
Link to source
OK, sorry.
You're looking at operating income. It's not the "income" a company actually earns. You should look at NET INCOME (or at least income before tax).
Operating income is lower because of higher cost of sales (manufacturing costs). This is fully mitigated by gains in equity investments.
These may be connected. I can tell you later when I check the full statement.
AMD needs to keep giving away their top tier server CPUs which are head & shoulders above Intel for many years to come to develope their working ecosystem and for the corporate upgrade cycle to kick in.
Thing is: top server chips don't matter as much as some think. AMD has a huge advantage in the 32+ core range. But it's actually quite even down the line.
Intel asks more, but gives more in return (in support, software, supply stability etc).
Once put in a large server, the price difference becomes less significant.
AMD will win customers that can benefit from high core density: supercomputers, some datacenters etc. It's already visible.
But if you're in a market for a typical 2 x 10-20 core rack, Intel remains the better (safer) choice.
I guess I just have a lesser opinion of the average customer than you. The vast majority are hardware tech illiterate imo and they look at the huge offering of desktops, laptops and servers with Intel CPUs and the small offering with AMD CPUs from the big manufacturers and they consider the last couple of PCs they had with "Intel Inside" that were good PCs and they go ahead and buy Intel again.
Just because you're fascinated with PC hardware doesn't mean everyone else has to be. You having "lesser opinion" of them doesn't matter. And is just sad, really.
Yes, most computers are bought by people who don't give a rats ass about things like IPC.
Currently AMD has small market share and they're fully focused on "enthusiasts" and "gamers". This may work for 20% market share in PCs.
If they want to grow further, they'll have to sell to other groups as well.