so going forward CPU market going to be suck? intel are having issues for years now and will not going to get better for another few years (even that is an IF). as a result will continue to fall behind AMD as time goes by although they probably still able to make some money because they got the capacity to sell to OEMs. AMD have the best CPU but capacity will continue to be an issue to them since there is dozens if not hundreds of other chip maker also fab their chip at TSMC. with TSMC keep things tight to ensure they reap the benefit for being the best fab in the world price will also going to reflect this. we supposed to get faster performance for more cheaper price but when i saw AMD price their 5600X at $300 i was uhh, to be honest i was expecting with Ryzen 5k we probably able to get new 8 core 16 thread CPU for under $300. not the existing model end up keeping it's price and the new model end up being more expensive because it was faster. when will brand new 8 core 16 thread CPU based on the newest architecture design will reach $150? i sure hope it happens before 2025.
well maybe if nvidia failed to get ARM for themselves intel will let themselves to be bought by nvidia so they can have JHH as their new CEO.
We might be looking at something like 2011-2012 in reverse - one company with a process and arch advantage leading to far better efficiency, with the other company pushing clocks and throwing power efficiency out the window to compete. There will of course be differences; Intel is eminently competitive in IPC still, but on the other hand have to go with huge die sizes to keep up on 14nm. How that will evolve once Zen 4 arrives... who knows? I don't think we'll see another 14nm backport, so Rocket Lake might be peak IPC on 14nm. The question then becomes whether they'll keep pushing clocks higher or if they will have a 10nm/7nm alternative at that point.
I dont think we're going to see 8c16t below $150 in the next decade. Why would they do that? Nobody would have any reason to buy a CPU more expensive than that then, tanking average sales prices and causing major damage to the companies. Core counts have already increased enough to not be a limiting factor - in early 2017 high end MSDT was 4c8t, now its 16c32t. Going beyond that for consumers is meaningless. We might see 16c at ~$500 in a generation or two, and 8c at ~$300, but given the increasing costs of silicon production, that doesn't really seem likely.