No? Get one.You are assuming a mountain here. Its not to hard to get a fab contract
Of course. But given how AMD normally does their business, that would be very surprising.AMD is not going to tell us how long they have been working with samsung.
They're building the company value ("the hype") on this kind of partnerships.
During every Ryzen launch AMD shows a long litany of OEM representatives praising the new product and saying they'll be happy to use it in their PCs. And it happens months later. Or never.
By all means: Nvidia will not be the only Samsung fab client. Intel is there as well. And so could be AMD.So to assume Nvidia is going to be the only player with samsung is nonsense. Samsung wants more business and AMD will be right there.
But other that that it's the same story as with TSMC: AMD sells cheaper products and they can pay less for a wafer.
Well... there's one big difference. Samsung, unlike TSMC, also makes chips. They are the largest client of their in-house semiconductor manufacturing business.
And the leftover capacity is nothing compared to TSMC potential. In other words: AMD needs TSMC.
Of course you do.You don't have to be the highest bidder to get product out.
Why would TSMC conciously sell to a client who pays less than others?
It makes no sense and it's actually illegal. You can go to jail for that.
AMD fans like to state how TSMC and AMD are in great partnership. They aren't. TSMC is selling something. AMD is buying. That's it.AMD has been in bed with TSMC in 7nm and the only company making the bigger chips.
If anything, AMD had MUCH tighter connection with GF. During Ryzen 1000 launch AMD fans praised that. GF is great, innovative. AMD is great, fabless, innovative. Intel has supply problems because they aren't fabless. BLA BLA BLA
2 years forward no one remembers what GF is.
Now AMD is the company troubled with supply issues, because they're 100% dependent on a single supplier that - unlike in the GF era - they can't control or at least get a high priority.
All which EPYC chips? AMD has 3-4% of datacenter market share.You really think all those EPYC chips are not going to be at play?
And companies buy servers for 3+ years - not replace them every generation like a lot of people on this forum.