• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD Captures 28.7% Desktop Market Share in Q3 2024, Intel Maintains Lead

Joined
Jul 13, 2016
Messages
3,277 (1.07/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ASRock X670E Taichi
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 Chromax
Memory 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30
Video Card(s) MSI RTX 4090 Trio
Storage Too much
Display(s) Acer Predator XB3 27" 240 Hz
Case Thermaltake Core X9
Audio Device(s) Topping DX5, DCA Aeon II
Power Supply Seasonic Prime Titanium 850w
Mouse G305
Keyboard Wooting HE60
VR HMD Valve Index
Software Win 10
This is a reminder to all the people worrying about Intel up and failing overnight, AMD still only has 28.7% marketshare despite being in the lead for 3 generations and a catastrophic gaggle of CPU defects on Intel's end.

Intel's monopoly power allowed pure incompetence to take root at Intel for over a decade and still dogs them to this day. Intel has to go through significant financial pain in order to shake things up and refresh itself.
 
Joined
May 3, 2019
Messages
2,092 (1.03/day)
System Name BigRed
Processor I7 12700k
Motherboard Asus Rog Strix z690-A WiFi D4
Cooling Noctua D15S chromax black/MX6
Memory TEAM GROUP 32GB DDR4 4000C16 B die
Video Card(s) MSI RTX 3080 Gaming Trio X 10GB
Storage M.2 drives WD SN850X 1TB 4x4 BOOT/WD SN850X 4TB 4x4 STEAM/USB3 4TB OTHER
Display(s) Dell s3422dwg 34" 3440x1440p 144hz ultrawide
Case Corsair 7000D
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z5450/KEF uniQ speakers/Bowers and Wilkins P7 Headphones
Power Supply Corsair RM850x 80% gold
Mouse Logitech G604 lightspeed wireless
Keyboard Logitech G915 TKL lightspeed wireless
Software Windows 10 Pro X64
Benchmark Scores Who cares
Wow Intel still has 71% thought it would be less by now with AMD on a win so much. The lead Intel has is still very hard to overtake, it could take AMD years, IF they ever do overtake.
 
Joined
Aug 25, 2021
Messages
1,170 (0.99/day)
What's wrong with mislabelling years on the Server graph?
Also, Passmark has differewnt numbers for all segments, so we are asking the question about methodologies used?
Screenshot 2024-11-09 at 02-13-23 PassMark CPU Benchmarks - AMD vs Intel Market Share.png
 
Joined
Sep 1, 2020
Messages
2,343 (1.52/day)
Location
Bulgaria
Aren't those places mostly buying i3's maybe i5's? This is based on the kind of office desktops I've seen in my life; I don't think I've seen a single Celeron (and later Pentium) ever. That said I also think Lenovo is the only one currently offering AMD systems.
Depends of standard of life in country. Wow core i5 from last 5(or 7, if count from core i5 8000 series) generations is enough powerful to be base for 2+ office workseats equipped with a monitor, mouse and keyboard. Of course, with a suitable motherboard with enough video outputs, or with a splitter.
 
Joined
Aug 8, 2024
Messages
22 (0.21/day)
I really don't believe it's that bad for Intel on the Desktop side. Arrow Lake doesn't have great performance but things could improve with new BIOS, drivers, patches etc. Same as was the case with Zen 5 when it was first released.

Where AMD is really destroying Intel now is in the Datacenter space and AI. This is were the high margins are.

Meanwhile, the Ryzen 9800x3d will keep selling like hot cakes.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
1,834 (0.63/day)
lol for office tasks a dual core 4 thread alder lake series celeron is perfectly sufficient and very cheap. AMD really hasn't released anything in this ultra-budget segment of the market for a long time. I guess the last ones were some sort of Athlon 3000 series?
AM4 5000 series processors go down to $70 and are cheaper and faster than the Intel ones you mentioned. No one has released budget processors in over three years not including that ridiculous $100 Intel 300 dual core.
 
Joined
Sep 17, 2014
Messages
22,437 (6.03/day)
Location
The Washing Machine
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi
Cooling Thermalright Peerless Assassin
Memory 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000
Video Card(s) ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming
Storage Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB
Display(s) Gigabyte G34QWC (3440x1440)
Case Lian Li A3 mATX White
Audio Device(s) Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1
Power Supply EVGA Supernova G2 750W
Mouse Steelseries Aerox 5
Keyboard Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II
Software W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC
Benchmark Scores Over 9000
Wow Intel still has 71% thought it would be less by now with AMD on a win so much. The lead Intel has is still very hard to overtake, it could take AMD years, IF they ever do overtake.
Its crazy isn't it... But I remember when Intel was about to go big little and said something along the lines of 'meh, we might have to give AMD 15% of the market'.

And here we are... I think we're also starting to see the exponential growth rate of this market share, there will be a point where it all accelerates, and it could be now, for all the known reasons.
 
Joined
Jul 20, 2020
Messages
1,123 (0.71/day)
System Name Gamey #1 / #3
Processor Ryzen 7 5800X3D / Ryzen 7 5700X3D
Motherboard Asrock B450M P4 / MSi B450 ProVDH M
Cooling IDCool SE-226-XT / IDCool SE-224-XTS
Memory 32GB 3200 CL16 / 16GB 3200 CL16
Video Card(s) PColor 6800 XT / GByte RTX 3070
Storage 4TB Team MP34 / 2TB WD SN570
Display(s) LG 32GK650F 1440p 144Hz VA
Case Corsair 4000Air / TT Versa H18
Audio Device(s) Dragonfly Black
Power Supply EVGA 650 G3 / EVGA BQ 500
Mouse JSCO JNL-101k Noiseless
Keyboard Steelseries Apex 3 TKL
Software Win 10, Throttlestop
Both teams have decent product stacks, in the average real world use cases there's actually going to be little difference between them. People get way too excited and hyped now for fringe performance gains. Sure you can save seconds in application performance, unless you do really intensive stuff constantly it's not going to change your work day. It's only really the edge use cases that it makes a difference, people doing loads of very intensive cpu tasks or gaming at low res like 1080p with high end GPUs.

Servers are where CPU gains can really show, but datacenters upgrades move slowly and reliability more important than speed.

You missed a big, glaring difference between Intel and AMD's CPU offerings:

Battery Life.

I bought my kid an AMD 7490-based laptop (Asus A15) for college instead of the Intel 12/13xxx option (Asus F15) for the 50-100% longer battery life because AMD's CPUs are power efficient whereas Intel's are not. That is a huge difference where it really counts.

Wow Intel still has 71% thought it would be less by now with AMD on a win so much. The lead Intel has is still very hard to overtake, it could take AMD years, IF they ever do overtake.

Big corps (Dell, HP, Lenovo) buy Intel because they always have and they deal in huge volumes, pretty simple. That AMD is as high as it is shows that when given a choice, individual buyers will choose the better option for them.
 
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
9,127 (3.34/day)
System Name Best AMD Computer
Processor AMD 7900X3D
Motherboard Asus X670E E Strix
Cooling In Win SR36
Memory GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled)
Storage Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500
Display(s) GIGABYTE FV43U
Case Corsair 7000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1
Power Supply Deepcool 1000M
Mouse Logitech g7 gaming mouse
Keyboard Logitech G510
Software Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin
Benchmark Scores Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121
lol for office tasks a dual core 4 thread alder lake series celeron is perfectly sufficient and very cheap. AMD really hasn't released anything in this ultra-budget segment of the market for a long time. I guess the last ones were some sort of Athlon 3000 series?
Well I work for the Biggest Technology Company in my Country and my Laptop is a AMD APU based system. This is not 2017 anymore. Just think of what the 3500G costs for HP.
 
Joined
Jan 27, 2024
Messages
170 (0.56/day)
Processor AMD
Motherboard AMD chipset
Cooling Cool
Memory Fast
Video Card(s) AMD/ATi Radeon | Matrox Ultra high quality
Storage Lexar
Display(s) 4K
Case Transparent left side window
Audio Device(s) Yes
Power Supply Deepcool Gold 750W
Mouse Yes
Keyboard Yes
VR HMD No
Software Windows 10
Benchmark Scores Yes
Depends of standard of life in country. Wow core i5 from last 5(or 7, if count from core i5 8000 series) generations is enough powerful to be base for 2+ office workseats equipped with a monitor, mouse and keyboard. Of course, with a suitable motherboard with enough video outputs, or with a splitter.

Office workseats can be fine with a mid range smartphone, as well. You definitely don't need a core i5.

Back to reality:

first Arrow Lake post launch sales numbers AMD share shoots up to 95%

ℹ️ Units
AMD: 730 units sold, 94.81%, ASP: 267
Intel: 40, 5.19%, ASP: 388

ℹ️Revenue
AMD: 195201, 92.64%
Intel: 15509, 7.36% LOctober 29, 2024

 
Joined
Jun 14, 2020
Messages
3,441 (2.12/day)
System Name Mean machine
Processor 12900k
Motherboard MSI Unify X
Cooling Noctua U12A
Memory 7600c34
Video Card(s) 4090 Gamerock oc
Storage 980 pro 2tb
Display(s) Samsung crg90
Case Fractal Torent
Audio Device(s) Hifiman Arya / a30 - d30 pro stack
Power Supply Be quiet dark power pro 1200
Mouse Viper ultimate
Keyboard Blackwidow 65%
despite being in the lead for 3 generations and a catastrophic gaggle of CPU defects on Intel's end.
Are they? Sales don't show that. See that huge spike in Q1 of 2022. That's the alderlake launch.
 
Joined
Mar 16, 2017
Messages
2,094 (0.75/day)
Location
Tanagra
System Name Budget Box
Processor Xeon E5-2667v2
Motherboard ASUS P9X79 Pro
Cooling Some cheap tower cooler, I dunno
Memory 32GB 1866-DDR3 ECC
Video Card(s) XFX RX 5600XT
Storage WD NVME 1GB
Display(s) ASUS Pro Art 27"
Case Antec P7 Neo
I hate my HP Adler Lake i7 laptop at work. Slow, terrible battery life, and liquid magma hot. All for 2 measly P-cores. MS Office isn’t exactly a model of efficiency either, especially their never ending mess they call New Outlook. Even the everyday office grunt needs more than 2 P cores.
 
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
2,318 (6.40/day)
System Name The Workhorse
Processor AMD Ryzen R9 5900X
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus B550 Pro
Cooling CPU - Noctua NH-D15S Case - 3 Noctua NF-A14 PWM at the bottom, 2 Fractal Design 180mm at the front
Memory GSkill Trident Z 3200CL14
Video Card(s) NVidia GTX 1070 MSI QuickSilver
Storage Adata SX8200Pro
Display(s) LG 32GK850G
Case Fractal Design Torrent (Solid)
Audio Device(s) FiiO E-10K DAC/Amp, Samson Meteorite USB Microphone
Power Supply Corsair RMx850 (2018)
Mouse Razer Viper (Original) on a X-Raypad Equate Plus V2
Keyboard Cooler Master QuickFire Rapid TKL keyboard (Cherry MX Black)
Software Windows 11 Pro (23H2)
Since the Athlon XP and Athlon 64 times, AMD has the better products.
Unfortunately, the market is so corrupt, and they prefer shenanigans than actual product quality.
For sure, for sure, that half a decade of Bulldozer was absolute fire and it’s really unfortunate that the CORRUPT market ignores such quality products and it almost led AMD to bankruptcy. If only we bought more FXs. /s
 
Joined
Dec 25, 2023
Messages
41 (0.12/day)
Why does this article only post a half-truth?

Here is the complete financial statement.

  • Record Data Center segment revenue of $3.5 billion was up 122% year-over-year and 25% sequentially primarily driven by the strong ramp of AMD Instinct™ GPU shipments and growth in AMD EPYC™ CPU sales.
  • Client segment revenue was $1.9 billion, up 29% year-over-year and 26% sequentially primarily driven by strong demand for “Zen 5” AMD Ryzen™ processors.
  • Gaming segment revenue was $462 million, down 69% year-over-year and 29% sequentially primarily due to a decrease in semi-custom revenue.
  • Embedded segment revenue was $927 million, down 25% year-over-year as customers normalized their inventory levels. On a sequential basis, revenue increased 8% as demand improved in several end markets.
AMD's GPU's are not their focus. It is only 6.8% of their total revenue and will keep getting smaller. Hence they're abandoning RDNA and combining it with CDNA.

I don't know why you all bicker about brands. Buy what's best and don't worry about the logo. My next purchases soon will be AMD 9800X3D or 9950X3D, Macbook M4 Pro, and Nvidia 5080 or 5090.
 
Joined
Jan 27, 2024
Messages
170 (0.56/day)
Processor AMD
Motherboard AMD chipset
Cooling Cool
Memory Fast
Video Card(s) AMD/ATi Radeon | Matrox Ultra high quality
Storage Lexar
Display(s) 4K
Case Transparent left side window
Audio Device(s) Yes
Power Supply Deepcool Gold 750W
Mouse Yes
Keyboard Yes
VR HMD No
Software Windows 10
Benchmark Scores Yes
For sure, for sure, that half a decade of Bulldozer was absolute fire and it’s really unfortunate that the CORRUPT market ignores such quality products and it almost led AMD to bankruptcy. If only we bought more FXs. /s

Bulldozer was ahead of its time, and never got the software support it needed in order to work....
Not to mention, that for 20 years before that "half a decade" intel had made everything possible to kick AMD out of the market..
 
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
2,318 (6.40/day)
System Name The Workhorse
Processor AMD Ryzen R9 5900X
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus B550 Pro
Cooling CPU - Noctua NH-D15S Case - 3 Noctua NF-A14 PWM at the bottom, 2 Fractal Design 180mm at the front
Memory GSkill Trident Z 3200CL14
Video Card(s) NVidia GTX 1070 MSI QuickSilver
Storage Adata SX8200Pro
Display(s) LG 32GK850G
Case Fractal Design Torrent (Solid)
Audio Device(s) FiiO E-10K DAC/Amp, Samson Meteorite USB Microphone
Power Supply Corsair RMx850 (2018)
Mouse Razer Viper (Original) on a X-Raypad Equate Plus V2
Keyboard Cooler Master QuickFire Rapid TKL keyboard (Cherry MX Black)
Software Windows 11 Pro (23H2)
Bulldozer was ahead of its time, and never got the software support it needed in order to work....
That’s a popular delusion among some rabid AMD fans, yeah, but no, if we are being serious Bulldozer was just an absolute dud of an architecture with numerous flaws that no amount of software support could fix. It was AMD making an incredibly wrong prediction on the future of computing in a medium perspective and then also executing horribly on it.
 
Joined
Nov 26, 2021
Messages
1,645 (1.51/day)
Location
Mississauga, Canada
Processor Ryzen 7 5700X
Motherboard ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6)
Cooling Noctua NH-C14S (two fans)
Memory 2x16GB DDR4 3200
Video Card(s) Reference Vega 64
Storage Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700
Case Fractal Design R5
Power Supply Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W
Mouse Logitech
VR HMD Oculus Rift
Software Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04
It's been an interesting battle. x86 has long been capable of being powerful, with Intel and AMD scaling designs down for better low-power results. Arm has long been low-power capable, and has been scaled-up for more performance. We're finally starting to meet in the middle here on power and efficiency, and emulation is finally becoming viable. Apple was able to make the jump in 2020, but they don't operate at the scale of Windows. Snapdragon X might not gain a ton of market share, but it shows what can be done now. I wonder if/when we'll see AMD make an Arm solution. They did years ago, but the concept was too early since WOA was not ready.
For AMD, it makes sense to stick to x86 where they are only one of two alternatives. The ARM market has many more competitors and they would lose their unique selling point.

This market research is becoming more and more irrelevant without taking into consideration ARM processors (Apple, Qualcomm, Mediatek, Nvidia, Ampere, Amazon, Google, etc) and new form factors (tablets, smartphones, handhelds, smart devices, etc) that have replaced laptops and desktops as client’s primary computing devices in some cases.

Even if you combine AMD and Intel revenue together, it’s just a fraction of revenue of ARM and GPU compute. Market research helps one invest and this report is not going to help with that. It will only tell you who is ahead between two players out of dozens.
For client computing, ignoring ARM makes no sense. However, for servers, it's primarily GPUs, i.e. Nvidia, that is taking the market by storm.
 
Joined
Dec 14, 2013
Messages
2,717 (0.68/day)
Location
Alabama
Processor Ryzen 2600
Motherboard X470 Tachi Ultimate
Cooling AM3+ Wraith CPU cooler
Memory C.R.S.
Video Card(s) GTX 970
Software Linux Peppermint 10
Benchmark Scores Never high enough
Wow Intel still has 71% thought it would be less by now with AMD on a win so much. The lead Intel has is still very hard to overtake, it could take AMD years, IF they ever do overtake.
Based on past events, I'm not too suprised Intel still holds a majority market share.

Intel entrenched itself years ago in many places like the server market for entities like the gov for example.
These are known to stick with what they have been running, contracts involved too and not to mention Intel's own past about slashing/undercutting the price per chip so AMD coudn't really compete for contracts, gov or otherwise.

Also:
You can't base all of what their market share "Should be" according to what gamers get and gaming PC's in general.
Computers are used in so many other things and those numbers dwarf the number of gaming PC use machines out in the wild.

There is also the public perception of "What" and "Who" makes computer chips in play too, remember years ago the little Intel aliens in their advertising?
They established their name, their product's own name (Pentium) in the minds of consumers and that's how it's been since.

It's the same basic thing for example as when you look for penetrating lube for rusty bolts and door locks, what comes to mind?
WD-40 of course.

It's a name association kind of thing Intel created and fostered over the years but now things are beginning to change.
I've only seen maybe two AMD advertisements period, used to see and hear Intel ads all the time and even now they still have those out there..... Just not as many in recent times.

That's one big reason how and why Intel still has the market share they have today.
 
Joined
Jan 27, 2024
Messages
170 (0.56/day)
Processor AMD
Motherboard AMD chipset
Cooling Cool
Memory Fast
Video Card(s) AMD/ATi Radeon | Matrox Ultra high quality
Storage Lexar
Display(s) 4K
Case Transparent left side window
Audio Device(s) Yes
Power Supply Deepcool Gold 750W
Mouse Yes
Keyboard Yes
VR HMD No
Software Windows 10
Benchmark Scores Yes
That's one big reason how and why Intel still has the market share they have today.

This is starting to change...

Because:

1. Intel itself starts to make wrong decisions - the new generation is a performance downgrade (lack of SMT is a critical mistake);
2. The customers begin to see better, and the large retailers' sales numbers show that 90% and more of the sales are in Ryzen's favour, not the other way round (look at Mindfactory, Amazon, etc., where the first 7 bestselling CPUs are all AMD Ryzen, while the first Intel CPU is at the miserable 8th place);
3. x86-64 and process node stagnation - Intel is going to lose its own fabs, which means very serious problems that are only beginning to materialize today..
 
Joined
Dec 1, 2020
Messages
458 (0.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 5 7600X
Motherboard ASRock B650M PG Riptide
Cooling Noctua NH-D15
Memory DDR5 6000Mhz CL28 32GB
Video Card(s) Nvidia Geforce RTX 3070 Palit GamingPro OC
Storage Corsair MP600 Force Series Gen.4 1TB
Office workseats can be fine with a mid range smartphone, as well. You definitely don't need a core i5.

Back to reality:

first Arrow Lake post launch sales numbers AMD share shoots up to 95%

ℹ️ Units
AMD: 730 units sold, 94.81%, ASP: 267
Intel: 40, 5.19%, ASP: 388

ℹ️Revenue
AMD: 195201, 92.64%
Intel: 15509, 7.36% LOctober 29, 2024

The update from the last week, its not so bad, 1851 sold looping 10 motherboards.
Screenshot_20241110-054723_X.png
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 12, 2005
Messages
707 (0.10/day)
Office workseats can be fine with a mid range smartphone, as well. You definitely don't need a core i5.

Back to reality:

first Arrow Lake post launch sales numbers AMD share shoots up to 95%

ℹ️ Units
AMD: 730 units sold, 94.81%, ASP: 267
Intel: 40, 5.19%, ASP: 388

ℹ️Revenue
AMD: 195201, 92.64%
Intel: 15509, 7.36% LOctober 29, 2024

Office workseat can require quite a lot of performance when you add all the security tools installed. Got an 10th gen i7 (4core 8 thread) and it take forever to boot and get ready into windows. It could definitively benefits from having more core and more raw CPU power.

At least they give us 32 GB of ram.



On another subject. Intel still ahead because of their fabs. They can still ship tons of CPU. AMD have to fight with many customers at TSMC and they still can't get the volume they would need to be the leader in the market.

i don't fuss too much about the instruction sets. The front end could probably be swapped easily and even ARM might not last as RISC V is getting traction and require no licenses. (see the qualcomm story. In the end, arm is competitive because they design CPU for mobile and desktop now instead of just mobile.

Sadly, on x86, the primary target of every CPU uArch is still the server/datacenter market. That is why they are not that much competitive on lower power side and this is why they are getting beaten by some of these ARM CPU in single core.
On the server market, Single core perf is not that important where it is really important on desktops.

On the Server market, ARM have made some push, but x86 still in the leads for what you can get right now.
 
Joined
Sep 13, 2022
Messages
216 (0.27/day)
The desktop business market is probably why Intel still is and will continue to be ahead of AMD. Companies like to have their hardware as standarized as possible because it simplifies both adquisition and IT support and I've yet to see a big company use AMD as their main platform. SMBs will usually buy the hardware in stores like everyone else. From medium sizes and up they usually have specialized suppliers with well stablished supply lines that deal mainly in one type of plarform, mostly Intel.

Case in point: about four months ago I was in a meeting with the reps from one of our costumers regarding a software feature we'd recently released for them. The asked us why it was taking them so much longer to work compared to what we showed them so I asked what hardware they were using and they said Intel. We told them the presentation was made on high end AMD CPUs because they had better multicore performance and 2 minutes later I received an email from their IT department asking for AMD recomendations because they were going to buy a batch of AMD laptops for the people using the feature. Now a little detail I waited until now to mention is the client being the country's branch of a big ass Fortune 500 multinational corporation with a bit shy of 50,000 workers just in this country. The fact that they bothered to ask us about AMD gives you and idea of how far from anything AMD they usually are. In the end we told them to go with anything from the AMD 79XX series since AFAIK there are no Threadripper laptops. We've worked closely with a lot of medium to big companies and they all, without exception, use Intel.

EDIT: I just realized those unfamiliar with IT ops might not fully understand all the above. Here's the short version: if a company is big enough to have it's own IT deparment it will also have a space where they will keep spares. In a small company you might find a small closet with a few keyboards, mice, etc. and in a big one you'll more likely find anything from a big room to a whole warehouse full of everything they'd need. Those spares are there so when something inevitaby breaks the operational downtime is reduced to the time it takes to call IT and wait for them to bring in the replacement, which is a big part of IT responsabilities. So, when they said they were going to buy AMD laptops what they were actually saying was "we don't have AMD in our spares", since spares are there to replace what they actually use.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 14, 2013
Messages
2,717 (0.68/day)
Location
Alabama
Processor Ryzen 2600
Motherboard X470 Tachi Ultimate
Cooling AM3+ Wraith CPU cooler
Memory C.R.S.
Video Card(s) GTX 970
Software Linux Peppermint 10
Benchmark Scores Never high enough
This is starting to change...

Because:

1. Intel itself starts to make wrong decisions - the new generation is a performance downgrade (lack of SMT is a critical mistake);
2. The customers begin to see better, and the large retailers' sales numbers show that 90% and more of the sales are in Ryzen's favour, not the other way round (look at Mindfactory, Amazon, etc., where the first 7 bestselling CPUs are all AMD Ryzen, while the first Intel CPU is at the miserable 8th place);
3. x86-64 and process node stagnation - Intel is going to lose its own fabs, which means very serious problems that are only beginning to materialize today..
I saw your reaction and I'd like to know what's wrong with what I posted since all that is true and yes, things did happen that way in general concerning Intel.

I'm not going to deny Intel making bad decisions as of late, that's obvious from what's been over the past few years to say the least of it.

Customers can tell what's good and what's not, provided they know something about CPUs but you can't deny many don't even give it a second thought - You mention getting parts for a build, they'll immediately think about or mention Intel, sometimes one of their chip models as reference.

It's a little someting called reputation, or in this case a well established "Brand reputation".

The point I made about "WD-40" holds because so many just don't know or bother to think about an alternative, even if it's mentioned because Intel made themselves a household name when it comes to computing in the early days (Early to mid 2000's) and because of that, when you start talking about CPU's Intel immediately comes to mind for them.
Alot of the time you literally have to explain and show it to them before they really start to understand.

That's because they tend to go with what they know....
That's just human nature, and if they don't know about the past vs today's AMD vs Intel, guess what they'll choose roughly 90% of the time?
Why Intel of course.

That's why I'm not suprised they still hold as large of a market share as they do right now.... But yeah - That's slowly changing and has been for a few years now, and it ain't getting any better ATM.
 
Joined
Oct 24, 2022
Messages
190 (0.25/day)
The company X can only be profitable if it has a high share of the x86 market. To do this, this company X, which is very large and has a very high operating expenses, needs to blackmail other PC and server assembly companies to they only use their CPUs (from the company X) and engage in other illegal practices. This was the only way this company X can be profitable.

I really hope that Nvidia comes in putting the sole of its shoe on the chest of Intel and AMD to they both be forced to launch new CPUs with higher IPC and lower power consumption.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Apr 30, 2011
Messages
2,703 (0.55/day)
Location
Greece
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 5600@80W
Motherboard MSI B550 Tomahawk
Cooling ZALMAN CNPS9X OPTIMA
Memory 2*8GB PATRIOT PVS416G400C9K@3733MT_C16
Video Card(s) Sapphire Radeon RX 6750 XT Pulse 12GB
Storage Sandisk SSD 128GB, Kingston A2000 NVMe 1TB, Samsung F1 1TB, WD Black 10TB
Display(s) AOC 27G2U/BK IPS 144Hz
Case SHARKOON M25-W 7.1 BLACK
Audio Device(s) Realtek 7.1 onboard
Power Supply Seasonic Core GC 500W
Mouse Sharkoon SHARK Force Black
Keyboard Trust GXT280
Software Win 7 Ultimate 64bit/Win 10 pro 64bit/Manjaro Linux
So, Intel still sells 70% of desktop CPUs inspite of their products being inferior in most aspects for 4 years now (since Zen3)? And there are people that pity Intel for them being on a difficult position financially? I am almost sure they keep spending big money on OEMs in order to keep their sales high for their inferior products.
 
Top