If in the last quarter the number of AIBs sold where less that 10 millions, how do you make that 24.1 millions cards number?
You said:
They will be gaining market share in the next year and take back of the market share they lost after Maxwell release.
Prior to Maxwell's release AMD were selling on average 5.1 million discrete cards per quarter. The last two quarters they have sold 2.54 million and 1.69 million. In order to regain their prior market position they would need to outsell Nvidia by a margin of 2:1...unless your thinking is that for AMD to regain market share in your eyes is to transiently hit 35-37% for a quarter to consider it job done. If that is your thinking then it is false economy. AMD's market share prior to Maxwell's launch was pretty steady- albeit in a slow decline, at 40.2% in Q2 2012 to 37.9% in Q2 2014, yet because of overall discrete market decline and AMD's lower ASP's, they have shipped fewer cards every quarter for the last two years and realized less and less profit.
A financial quarters market share taken in isolation means little, and history tells us that even with being first to DX11, and having virtually no opposition (including none at the enthusiast level aside from the GTX 295 for most of a year), and Nvidia's Fermi delay, AMD have never managed to claw back more than 10% market share before dropping back. The ONLY time ATI/AMD took serious market share from Nvidia was in 2004 and that had little to do with the cards and everything to do with ATI being able to field PCI-E interface cards when the Intel 915/925X chipsets launched.
How many times has the AMD revolution been imminent? and how many times has it come up short? You can argue the future all you like, but until it happens it is moot....just like the AMD revolution
We are in 2015. Almost everybody has access to internet or knows someone who do have access to internet. Many people ask others who DO know about GPUs. Or just register an account on a tech site, create a thread "What can I buy with that amount of money", get the answers, buy the card they where told them to buy and then never again visit that forum. People do look at graphs, also many just buy gigabytes. If things where as simple as you describe them, the market share would have been closer to 50-50 than 20-80. That 20-80 can happen ONLY if most people ASK before buying.
One huge flaw in your argument is that one company possesses top of the mind brand awareness among consumers, and one doesn't. Believe it or not, people had the internet in 2014, and 2013, and 2012...check if you don't believe me. AMD have had performance parity during almost the entire modern GPU era, including a period where they owned the fastest card (HD 5970), fastest single GPU card (HD 5870), best bang for buck card since the 8800GT ( HD 5850), Eyefinity, and full DirectX 11 compliance when its competitor had none. YET STILL LOST MARKET SHARE. Yet, for some reason - that you put down to people having internet access in 2015, AMD is going to double its market share because it has (at best) a slight edge in DX12 and a distinct disadvantage in DX11 (where a lot of titles will reside for some time). Yeah, OK. That's why I'm going to keep a cursory eye on your predictions - I love a good come from behind win.
I like how you say here that AMD had always the edge on price but that didn't help them enough. So can this be possible an indication that people DO ask about GPUs before buying?
Ask a hundred people whether Intel is better than AMD. Do you really think the split would accurately reflects the relative merits of the processors and platforms?
You seem fundamentally unaware of brand recognition and
top of the mind awareness. AMD have plenty of adherents and advocates on tech forums, indulge in guerrilla/viral marketing, and have PR up to the eye teeth - yet they still suffer in image (and thus in sales), in part because they lack the profile, and in part because for every step forward they tend to shoot themselves in the foot taking the step. AMD's produces great hardware, but for every Fury launch and DX12 benchmark, AMD have a big Roy Taylor moment - and when sites start calling them on it, they and their more ardent fans pitch a full scale hissy fit. It really shouldn't be a surprise that company confidence leads to a stronger customer marketing perception (and customer perception equals reality in marketing - one look at Apple should suffice as an example) ....and quite frankly, AMD possesses none. Intel seldom indulge in public displays of whining and even Nvidia seemed to have learned after Jen-Hsun's "open a can of whoop ass" moment, yet AMD persist with the
plucky underdog shtick - which just tells the average consumer that the company is giving itself a licence to fail.
Anyhow, we'll see how well in tune with the technology market we both are in due course. It is rather pointless arguing over future history.
/OUT