- Joined
- Dec 10, 2011
- Messages
- 434 (0.09/day)
Most market analyst were in agreement that 2nd quarter will bring something in numbers. Make no mistake Intel is giant and CPU is just one of the branches. They can fund chip making division with other divisions easily.
However it hurts them, in a plethora of numbers you can easily drown the under-performing division. Between March and June it'll be certainly more visible. Especially if AMD floods the market with Ryzen laptops. That was the stalwart, monopoly market for Intel for decades and if AMD can dislodge Intel here (with clearly superior processors) it'll hurt the bottom line. Make no mistake. Moves from companies like Dell or HP which were officially fed-up with Intel lack of supplies for IS and switched to AMD exclusively that's another. It's to early to really notice these shifts. It takes time. By the end of June I'm sure we'll see something. You can't take losses on such scale and hope that creative accountancy will solve all problems.
Intel surely are seething deep down... and it serves them well for stifling the market/innovation. In CPU space they simply have nothing worth looking at compared to competition. I wouldn't be surprised if AMD even pulled some low-power, low core count EPYC for mobile workstations. Why not? Reds just steamrolled Blues in 2019 and 2020 looks about the same in this regard.
IMHO Intel really missed the train of 3647 for HEDT. Instead resurrecting dead X299 platform they should've switched HEDT to 3647. There was plenty of potential. Me personally I don't need 28 core 5GHz Xeon 1kW CPU. But at stock that 28 core is very good chip. Push it to 10nm, work a bit on thermals, triple L3 cache, cut unnecessary server bits, cut the QPI links and convert them into PCIe lanes, lower the PRICE and it would sell easily. So yeah... Intel really were at sixes and sevens during 2019, will see if they have anything to respond in 2020.
However it hurts them, in a plethora of numbers you can easily drown the under-performing division. Between March and June it'll be certainly more visible. Especially if AMD floods the market with Ryzen laptops. That was the stalwart, monopoly market for Intel for decades and if AMD can dislodge Intel here (with clearly superior processors) it'll hurt the bottom line. Make no mistake. Moves from companies like Dell or HP which were officially fed-up with Intel lack of supplies for IS and switched to AMD exclusively that's another. It's to early to really notice these shifts. It takes time. By the end of June I'm sure we'll see something. You can't take losses on such scale and hope that creative accountancy will solve all problems.
Intel surely are seething deep down... and it serves them well for stifling the market/innovation. In CPU space they simply have nothing worth looking at compared to competition. I wouldn't be surprised if AMD even pulled some low-power, low core count EPYC for mobile workstations. Why not? Reds just steamrolled Blues in 2019 and 2020 looks about the same in this regard.
IMHO Intel really missed the train of 3647 for HEDT. Instead resurrecting dead X299 platform they should've switched HEDT to 3647. There was plenty of potential. Me personally I don't need 28 core 5GHz Xeon 1kW CPU. But at stock that 28 core is very good chip. Push it to 10nm, work a bit on thermals, triple L3 cache, cut unnecessary server bits, cut the QPI links and convert them into PCIe lanes, lower the PRICE and it would sell easily. So yeah... Intel really were at sixes and sevens during 2019, will see if they have anything to respond in 2020.