R&D cost of keeping up with AMD's rivals is very steep. Other than that, you'd have to talk to a corporate finance lawyer to figure out if 'only' showing a profit of $32M US was a good thing that quarter or not. Some, even larger companies, LOSE money in a given quarter - but are still very healthy from a high zoot wall street analyst's perspective. Most companies are playing the game they need to play, not necessarily the one we think they should.
I agree. I don't think that will win them many hearts and minds. Given what happened in their Graphics division, AMD may have had no choice but to stay out of high end gaming graphics for RDNA4 and probably RDNA5. After that, we'll see.
I'm not a fan of AMD or NVidia in GFX. I've bought mostly NV because the out off the box graphics drivers were terrible on the last two Radeon products I bought. I have no patience for this - but that's just me. I do favor AMD over Intel in CPUs - though I've owned a fairly equal number of both.
Oh I do I understand R&D costs. My own R&D is at least 5 years of research and I'm in my 2nd year of preproduction work.
Because of my understanding of actual manufacturing costs, distribution and essenually running lean, mean profitable machines, I can certainly express my opinions over what I see are excessive overheads in many of the corporations of today.
This means pretty much lower quality products to the customer base. For the Price of the 7000 series video card at lauch, it was mostly a fail.
To prove my point again with why I Blame Dr. Lisa Su and their management in the mess they are in with this video from Hardware Unboxed.
I was not impressed with this launch AT all.
Of late, I have not been impressed with anything AMD has been producing for the cost they trying to push.
And again you are not going to like the cost of the newest generations of motherboards coming soon.
These are bellweather points on what I think the video card section of AMD might produce in the future.
Increased Costs for less value and performance.