Intel Loses Market Share to AMD 283
diverge_s wrote to mention an article examining Intel's market share loss to AMD in the fourth quarter of 2005. From the article: "Sales of Intel-based desktop PCs fell 22.3 percent during the fourth quarter, according to Current Analysis. As a result, sales of AMD-based desktops took the lead during the pivotal fourth-quarter holiday shopping season. AMD chips were found in 52.5 percent of desktop PCs sold in U.S. retail stores during that period."
VIIV (Score:5, Funny)
Re:VIIV (Score:5, Funny)
Re:VIIV (Score:5, Insightful)
Their new push for quality engineering over marketing fluff will surely give them the lead again!
I am still ticked at my PERL mobo w. P4 HT 2.4GHz that died just out of warrenty.
If Intel want's back, cheaper, faster, cooler and more reliable come to mind. AMD has this over Intel at the moment and I have a 1.2GHz AMD that keeps on ticking.... so naturally one of those dual core AMD 64 X2 systems is on my list.
Re:VIIV (Score:2)
Godd quality and low prices work :) (Score:5, Insightful)
AMD just proves that regardless of your advertising budget, it all comes down to good performance and good price. I don't think I have ever seen an AMD commercial, whereas Intel was all over the TV. Dell has finally taken notice and will start widespread use of AMD chips soon. Thanks for the giving Intel some competition AMD!
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Re:Point of interest (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Point of interest (Score:5, Interesting)
pricewatch.com [pricewatch.com] Says the slowest Sempron being produced is the 2200+ and you can have it delivered for $57. For $60 you can get a 2.2Ghz Celeron which is no match for AMD's processor. The 2.2Ghz P4 costs $79 delivered, $22 more than the AMD offering.
The reason all those AMD chips appeared before Christmas was because they are so competitive at the lower end. When you match that with their server options AMD are wiping the floor with Intel at almost every level.
Cache... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Cache... (Score:2)
Yeah good thing that the MHZ for the sempron was not even mentioned. The 2200+ is just a label amd gives it and has little to do with MHz
Re:Cache... (Score:5, Informative)
Now, the first Netburst based Celerons, the 400mhz FSB / 128KiB L2 parts, are some of the worst chips intel produced since the cacheless Celeron 300s...
A more appropriate comparison of budget chips today would be the S754 Sempron 2500+ - 3100+ against the Celeron D 2.53 - 3.06. They stack up fairly comperabely in overall performance (Sempron wins for games, Celeron wins for multimedia), and prices are almost identical 63-80 for AMD, 66-80 for Intel.
AMD still has the price advantage against many P4s, but in the budget world it's a much closer race.
Re:Point of interest (Score:4, Informative)
Retail Desktop - Intel
Server - Intel
Corporate Desktop - Intel
Mobile - Intel
AMD is making headway in retail and server (intel has squat on their roadmap).
However, AMD is making much less on the segments they are competing in. Server is high ASP, but very low volume. Retail desktop is high volume, and razor thin ASP.
AMD needs to focus on being competitive in price to dominate corporate desktop (Intel's fab capacity means they can easily underprice AMD in this arena). Everyone keeps quoting the CPU price for a boxed part, but that is the HIGHEST POSSIBLE PRICE Intel will charge for a CPU. It can be 50-60-70% cheaper per CPU for high volume corporate sales. AMD is fukked in this area because in 30 years, they have still failed to even come close to Intel's volume. AMD hasn't had enough R&D dollars to compete here, but that can change.
And AMD also needs a competitive part in mobile, where the volume is growing every year and ASPs are sky high. This is where Intel is focusing. AMD is years behind Intel in mobile power-miserly processors.
So it is shaping up to be an interesting battle. Lets see if AMD can hang on to their lead this time.
Re:Point of interest (Score:5, Insightful)
Secondly, corporate desktops. The best that AMD can do is to try to underprice Intel, which will be difficult since Intel does have better process technology. Expect prices of the midline chips to fall as Intel lowers prices to maintain market share. With margins as thin as they are in this arena, AMD needs to work to maintain its performance edge on the high end chips where it can command better margins.
In laptop processors, the Pentium-M's excellent perfomance/power ratio means that AMD is not about to overtake Intel's number one position. AMD's Sempron may have better performance, but it also 25% (AFAIK) more power hungry. This is an important market segment, and while AMD puts up some competition, Intel is still the strongest. The price margins in the market aren't as large as those of the server market, but they're still better than the margins desktop market.
It's Intel's more advanced process technology that gives them the edge in producing the low power laptop chips, not the manufacturing volume. I wouldn't say that AMD is years behind Intel, just 10 months behind, which is far enough behind to be at a definite disadvantage. AMD should be concerned with improving its process technology while also trying to improve production capacity.
Re:Point of interest (Score:2)
I don't know where you shop, but where I shop, AMD is waaay cheaper than Intel, and always have been. You get a lot more bang for your buck with AMD, especially if you are a gamer!
Re:Point of interest (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Godd quality and low prices work :) (Score:4, Informative)
If you are referring strictly to the high-volume, sub-$25k/machine market, you're only kinda (barely) right.
If you are referring to any other segment of the server market that Intel and AMD both play in (ie. 4-way, and >$25k), you're wrong. Dell sold a whopping -4- machines that cost greater than $25k last quarter. -4-. Clusters are accounted for as lots of little machines, and while Intel has greater share there due to volume, AMD's presence in the cluster market is anything but insignificant. Saying that AMD is failling to penetrate the server market would have been true two years ago. It's not been true for a while, now (cf. Q32004 AMD's share in servers was 8% - for a company that effectively had -0- prior to Opteron, that's significant).
AMD's current share of the overall x86 server market is some 16% now. Calling 16% insignificant is a stretch, at best. This is particularly true in light of the near -40%- share that AMD has in the 4-way market. Of course, that's Q3's numbers. Not Q4's (which were announced yesterday -
Judging by Intel's -miss- of their market estimates, and AMD's blowing theres away, I'd say that their server numbers are up, yet again.
Re:Godd quality and low prices work :) (Score:2)
you probably stoped following the server market, then.
since the release of their first 64 bit chips a while ago, AMD jumped from a virtual 0% penetration on the server market to more than 11%. except for Intel's best buddy *COUGH*michaeldell*COUGH* the other big player all have Opteron oferings. not to mention the small mom-and-pop shops that now have the oportunity to compete in the 16-way server market with boa
Re:Godd quality and low prices work :) (Score:4, Interesting)
I have always thought that Intel has a high yield, quality process. However, their prices have always been higher than AMD, Cyrix, and any of the other competitors over the years. If their yield was good, then there was no reason for them to be higher priced. I always felt that they were gouging the customers, so I quit designing them into my systems. Since they are still higher priced than AMD for competing parts, I wonder if their yield has always been not so good.
Beige boxes? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Beige boxes? (Score:5, Insightful)
El cheapo? (Score:4, Insightful)
AMD is successful because from day one they've been in the business of making better products, not cheaper products. That they happen to be cheaper in some cases is just a sign that they have a successfully diverse product line.
Re:El cheapo? (Score:5, Insightful)
In related news, my pants were the leading distribution method for iPod nanos, in the USA, in California, in my house, yesterday.
Re:El cheapo? (Score:4, Informative)
The K5?! (Score:2)
Re:The K5?! (Score:2)
Re:El cheapo? (Score:5, Insightful)
Going back even further, the AMD 8086, 80286, 80386 and Am486 chips generally were just clones of the Intel offerings -- with similar performance, but coming out some time later at a lower price.
But things have changed. AMD has finally caught up to and passed Intel in many respects, and I suspect that the reason that Intel is still selling so many chips is more due to interia than anything else.
Re:Beige boxes? (Score:2)
For other people, el-cheapo models at Best Buy are (more than) sufficient. Except maybe on longevity, where things like lousy fans and faulty capacitors still are a problem.
Re:Beige boxes? (Score:5, Interesting)
Consumer vs Corporate? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Consumer vs Corporate? (Score:5, Insightful)
If Intel is holding on to dominance in any market segment it's more likely to be the result of their business relationship with a company like Dell, which has been propping Intel up for the last two years while AMD ate away the rest of their market.
AMD makes a great product at a competitive price. What happened to Intel will happen to every other company that starts thinking they have a right to exist. Intel sometimes acts like they're a government agency.
Re:Consumer vs Corporate? (Score:2)
Marketing misstep? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Marketing misstep? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Marketing misstep? (Score:4, Insightful)
Would you rather have an engine that puts out redlines at 6,000 or 12,000 RPM? I forgot to mention, the 6,000 RPM motor is a 5 liter V8, the 12,000 RPM motor is a 60 CC weedwacker motor.
Re:Marketing misstep? (Score:3, Funny)
I'd rather have the 12,000RPM motor in my weedwacker. I just imagine the 5 liter V8 would be a little cumbersome trying to get the areas around my fence.
Re:Marketing misstep? (Score:2)
Re:Marketing misstep? (Score:2)
You be wackin' some big weeds with that 60cc weedwacker motor.
I can't even tell WTF is going on (Score:2)
Re:I can't even tell WTF is going on (Score:2)
If you don't care, don't get annoyed about it. If you want to know but just fell behind, Tom's Hardware, Ars Technica and Anandtech have good articles to get you up to speed. If you're annoyed because you want to know but don't want to do any reading, well, I can't help you there.
meh... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:meh... (Score:2)
Re:meh... (Score:4, Funny)
I don't see MOS Technology [wikipedia.org] on the list [trustedcom...ggroup.org]...
Here's the CPU for you! [cpu-world.com]
Re:meh... (Score:2)
Gag, spit.
The Z80 is obviously superior to a toy like the 6502.
Re:meh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft basicly went out and said you'd need TCPA to run Vista. Given the OS market, The only one who could have refused that without being cast into obscurity would be Intel. And Intel/AMD both want the "Media Center" concept which sells their CPUs, I don't blame them. Your third-party candidate would have about as much power as in US elections. I
And to think... (Score:2)
Just wait 'til the Intel-based Macs come out (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just wait 'til the Intel-based Macs come out (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just wait 'til the Intel-based Macs come out (Score:2)
Re:Just wait 'til the Intel-based Macs come out (Score:2)
I call that BS
1. People could run Windows on their Macs before. Why didn't they jumped on that bandwagon? MS did make NT for PPC. Project failed.
2. OSX might be attractive to some, but still less attractive than cheap t
Re:Just wait 'til the Intel-based Macs come out (Score:2)
It will keep the house warm in winter, if that's nothing I don't know what is...
Does anyone even know what chip they have? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does anyone even know what chip they have? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone even know what chip they have? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone even know what chip they have? (Score:2)
Another favorite is "Adobe won't load".
"Adobe WHAT? Adobe is a company, not a product."
"You know, Adobe. For reading PDFs."
or (slightly less common but still strongly represented)
"You know, Adobe. For doing stuff with pictures."
Is AMD profitable? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is AMD profitable? (Score:5, Informative)
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=amd [yahoo.com]
Re:Is AMD profitable? (Score:3, Informative)
"For all of 2005, AMD earned $165.5 million, or 40 cents per share, on sales of $5.85 billion. That compares with a 2004 profit of $91.2 million, 25 cents per share, on sales of $5 billion."
So AMD earned more money in the recent 4th quarter than all of 2004. And a 125.6 million increase for 4th qu
Re:Is AMD profitable? (Score:2)
Intel slowed AMD's run to profitability last year when they shifted production from chipsets to flash memory (they use the same fabs). Dumping flash below cost hurt AMD more than it hurt Intel... at the time. Then Intel ran short of chipsets. Oops!
Intel is rapidly undergoing death-by-management. Never let marketing weasles
Intel goes outside (Score:4, Insightful)
(From an earlier [slashdot.org] discussion and article. [anandtech.com])
Now I am beginning to understand why Intel has made the decision to start focusing elsewhere.
How's the laptop market doing? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2, Interesting)
I know exactly why this is because I worked at Best Buy for three months. When centrino was introduced there were commercials everywhere. These commercials, intentional or otherwise, made it seem like centrino was the only way to connect wirelessly saying things like "Centrino technology is a huge advancement in wireless networking for people on the go". This statement was true, as centrino allowed for longer battery lif
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2)
On the 64-bit side of things, most retail companies continue to sell the Turion ML series, for which the processor costs $5 less that the MT, but uses another 10w of power. When it comes to running cool, this makes a huge difference. Hence, why my wife's laptop was built into an MSI n
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2, Interesting)
So, whether I buy new MacBook or Intel Somethino (tm), it is likely to be Intel.
And I strongly suspect, that every laptop chip is today more profitable, than 5 desktops-for-sale.
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2, Insightful)
Centrino is the chipset used in those notebooks.
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2, Informative)
Close...
From Intel:
The technology represented by the Intel Centrino mobile technology brand combines the Intel® Pentium® M processor, the Intel® 855 Chipset Family and the Intel® PRO/Wireless 2100 Network Connection. All components were optimized, validated and tested to work together with mobility in mind.
Re:How's the laptop market doing? (Score:2)
Two factors that are important! (Score:2, Interesting)
2) The speed of most newer computers is so ridiculously fast compared to just a couple of years ago that the processor just doesn't matter to the average PC buyer. Most people want to read their email, surf the web a
intel rise (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Shift in importance from hardware to software (Score:2)
Hardware is what Apple used to celebrate as being their important difference, now that they are on Intel platforms they have to rely on design. Trouble is the public wasn't keen on buying their design before and since the price didn't change neither will the buying public's opinion.
RETAIL sales.. (Score:3, Informative)
It does not include total sales, where AMDs market share is significantly lower. e.g. this report excludes Dell entirely. Overall, they're somewhere around 25% of total shipments.
AMD is taking marketshare away from Intel, but they are still a much smaller player.
Elephant in the room is Dell (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, Dell doesn't sell many of its computers in retail stores, it is the largest manufacturer in the US, and it doesn't use AMD chips (yet). So the quoted statistic is misleading at best. Still, more competition is always a good thing.
Re:Elephant in the room is Dell (Score:2)
Please explain how 52.5% is a "solid preference." Nowhere in the article does it mention Intel's share, but assuming it's around 45% (have to remember Apple!), I don't see a 7.5% swing being a "solid preference."
AMD Shortage (Score:2)
All shops in USA that I could find and that had them did not ship overseas.
Re:AMD Shortage (Score:2)
I have always drooled over (Score:2)
Re:I have always drooled over (Score:2)
I was already wanting to say you don't know much about fast. But,... then the sad truth pops out. You develop Java applications. Yes, Java is faster on Intel. It can't be optimized for PPC and runs against PPC rules.
Re:I have always drooled over (Score:2, Interesting)
You have to get your Java from Apple. I was stuck all through OSX 10.3.x with an old Java. Sun doesn't offer a build. Apple did bundle an update with OSX 10.4.
Gosling mentioned in an interview that he builds the latest Java on his Linux box, and copies the JARs over to his PowerBook. Somehow I haven't found enough spare time to try to do that myself. However I think Gosling slowly tried this over a long period of tim
Once again... (Score:4, Insightful)
I love statistics.
Death of a slogan (Score:2)
Waiting for the real news (Score:2)
Dell losing desktop market share to AMD system vendors.
Then something interesting might happen.
They used to call it the "Motorola Curse"... (Score:2)
Now, Apple is shipping with processors from Intel. So, if the curse holds, AMD is going to be mopping the floor with Intel... at least until Apple decides to ship some machines with AMD processors as well...
The other read could be that, well, this story is BS because it's not counting online sales ( Dell, duh ). Although, it's true that AMD has been gaining a little ground, due to having cheap laptop chips on one end and hot, killer 64-bit gaming-rig CPUs on the other end.
Whatever.
AMD just kicks Intel's butt, period (Score:2, Informative)
Re:So (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Naming (Score:2)
The only scenario where Intel wins is if the operation fits entirely in the CPU cache. Otherwise, Intel processors spend an awful lot of time waiting for data.
AMD, on the other hand, is far more efficient in data access and transport, and that's why, despite running at a lower clock rate, AMD wipes the floor with Intel in benchmarks these days.
Given the benchmarks that show AMD consistently outperforming Intel, how does Intel have a "pe
Speed? (Score:2)
Consumers would think a 2.2 ghz p-m type core to be inferior to a 3.0ghz p4. Thats not a correct indication of "speed" either. Hell you can't simply just say the word speed anymore. Theres so many things to consider.
Re:Naming (Score:2, Insightful)
At this stage it would be like asking car makers to put horsepower ratings in the name of each model. Consider a Lotus Elise 190 vs a Honda Prelude 190 vs a Ford Mustang 300 vs a Dodge Ram 235 vs a Porsche 911S 355 -- did the engine rating really a
Re:Naming (Score:2)
The 2.6GHz Athlon 64 roundly beats even the 3.5GHz Pentium 4 by a substantial margin in "real world" applications. For example, on the "Multimedia Winstone" real world benchmark, the 2.6GHz Athlon 64 FX60 beats the Pentium "Extreme Edition" at 3.5GHz (both a dual-core and are top of the line chips in their respective lineups). The benchmark shows that the Athlon is fully 20% faster than the Pentium 4 despite
AMD to the rescue ;-) (Score:3, Interesting)
So if Intel gets too aggressive on Apple, we might see Apple computers with AMD CPUs
Re:Way To Jobs! (Score:3, Interesting)
Apple Inc. sells Apple computers with Apple Mac OS X. Apple doesn't sell Intel Inside computers.
Re:Affordable 64-bit (Score:2)
Re:Affordable 64-bit (Score:2)
Re:Affordable 64-bit (Score:2)
MORE RAM (Score:2)
Re:MORE RAM (Score:2)
I suppose it's good to know that she got an actual 64 bit chip, not that it'll do her much good with the 32bit version of Windows I installed on the machine anyway.
Re:Affordable 64-bit (Score:2)
I'm a huge AMD fan (hell I have 4 AMD PCs in my house), but there seems to be a perception that 64 automatically is better. Well, IF your OS supports it AND your peripherals support it AND your drivers support it AND the app y
Re:Affordable 64-bit (Score:2)
Re:RETAIL stores (Score:2)
Re:Intel plays it smart. (Score:3, Informative)
With regards to competition - I want to build a PC. I can build an Intel based box or an AMD based box. How is that not competition? Do you think consumers think "Wellll, the AMD CPU is faster, cooler and cheaper, but boy their market cap just isn't impressive enough."?
Re:Eh.. (Score:2)
Because of the mobile chips (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure Intel's DRM technology and production capability also played a factor.