for some "8C/16T > 4C/4T 10% victory" does not sound impressive and promising, but it is!!! because prior this AMD would pack how many cores he wanted and clock them as high as AIO coolers could not even cool them (past 5.0 ghz or whatever)... and still wont beat intels i3 2C/4T... now AMD can beat even i5 as long as AMD can price them low (and they can - look at this FX series - how many cores priced so low) we will have upper midrange CPU competition again (since bulldozer there was zero... there fore intels progress was also sub 5% and prices also managed to bump up).
As far as pricing goes, it depends partly on recouping development cost and how much AMD may have spent on R&D on Zen and how much AMD has to spend to get companies that manufacture PCs and servers to use more of their Zen chips. That seems to be their biggest hurdle. Getting more PC and server manufacturers to buy and use their chips.
Probably the Zen chips will be priced pretty low but that's bad long term. AMD goes further into debt quarter after quarter with that policy. They need to get out of the red if they can and have some money also for R&D for future CPU generations.
Edit: This is only one article that I have read on the subject of AMD's decline in the CPU department according to financial analysts but it may be of some interest.
http://www.investopedia.com/stock-a...oblems-facing-advanced-micro-devices-amd.aspx
Taken from article:
"AMD competes with Intel in PC and server processors but has been bleeding share in both markets. In servers, AMD won as high as 25% market share in 2006, making it a major player in the industry. Today, AMD is essentially nonexistent in the segment, claiming a low single-digit share. Meanwhile, Intel has built a near-monopoly, allowing it to charge high prices and extract extremely high margins."
"In PCs, the story is much the same. Intel has continued to steal market share from AMD, especially at the low end with its Atom chips, despite already controlling most of the segment. During the second quarter of 2014, Intel generated nearly 95% of PC processor revenue, shipping 84% of all desktop processors and 88% of all laptop processors."