Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Intel Businesses Hardware

Intel CPU Shortages To Worsen in Q2 2019: Research (digitimes.com) 97

Shortages of Intel's CPUs are expected to worsen in the second quarter compared to the first as demand for Chromebooks, which are mostly equipped with Intel's entry-level processors, enters the high period, according to Digitimes Research. From the report: Digitimes Research expects Intel CPUs' supply gap to shrink to 2-3% in the first quarter with Core i3 taking over Core i5 as the series hit hardest by shortages. The shortages started in August 2018 with major brands including Hewlett-Packard (HP), Dell and Lenovo all experiencing supply gaps of over 5% at their worst moment. Although most market watchers originally believed that the shortages would gradually ease after vendors completed their inventory preparations for the year-end holidays, the supply gap in the fourth quarter of 2018 still stayed at the same level as that in the third as HP launched a second wave of CPU inventory buildup during the last quarter of the year, prompting other vendors to follow suit. Taiwan-based vendors were underprepared and saw their supply gaps expand from a single digit percentage previously to over 10% in the fourth quarter. With all the impacts, the notebook market continued suffering a 4-5% supply gap in the fourth quarter of 2018.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Intel CPU Shortages To Worsen in Q2 2019: Research

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is not going to be a problem for much longer.

    In fact, Intel's 10nm process node will be ready for high volume full-scale production any day now!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Nobody wants a Spectre, Meltdown, Spoiler, and IME bug-ridden Intel CPU. Until Intel gets their act together to close all these serious hardware design flaws, there will be NO shortage of craptastic Intel CPUs because nobody wants this garbage. Anyone claiming otherwise is spouting Fake News.

  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @04:22PM (#58263244)
    By ending Windows 7. A lot of perfectly good computers will be junked and will put a strain on intel and amd for "new" PCs.
    • Apparently that's a feature for Intel & Microsoft, etc and not a bug.

      Imagine the horror if everyone kept their current PC and OS twice as long .. maybe even as much as 1/5th the lifespan of a good toaster .. Quarterly revenue growth would be devastated and shareholders and the market would revolt. Can't have that now, can we?

    • by epine ( 68316 )

      A lot of perfectly good computers will be junked and will put a strain on intel and amd for "new" PCs.

      One man's "strain" is another man's comfortable margin.

      It's hardly ever the supply that's strained. The "strained" are almost always the smallest fish in the pond, with the least secure contractual futures and demand leverage. Apple is not going one measly CPU short of their ultimate desire, I guarantee it.

      What this story really means is that HP tooled up to sell a higher volume at a lower price point, and

      • Perhaps some of the OEMs will now add a line of computers with AMD where they had none before. It was quite some time ago, but I remember Dell had that once. Might have been the time of Athlon64 vs. Pentium4.

        • by mcl630 ( 1839996 )

          Dell has had AMD systems again for at least a couple years now.

        • by jjbenz ( 581536 )
          Years ago we had Dell Optiplex 740 and 580 systems at work. Both of those systems used AMD Athlon processors.
    • If there's a PC out there that can't have a free update to 10, it probably started its life running XP.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Windows 10 is only free if your privacy is worthless.

      • by Chryana ( 708485 )

        This. Microsoft offered everyone running Windows 7 to upgrade to Windows 10 for free for at least a year. Didn't want to take the free upgrade when it was offered? Life is tough. Go to the store and buy the latest version. Or install Windows 10 and try the Windows 7 key, it works surprisingly often. How long do people expect Microsoft to support them for free. When you start comparing how long Microsoft supported Windows 7 compared to Google and Apple with their respective operating systems, it doesn't look

        • You can still do the in-place upgrade to 10 as far as I'm aware. I still do it every month or two.

    • by xack ( 5304745 )
      Also perfectly good cpus are getting locked out because of lack of sse2 or 3. Its not just old cpus many embedded processors also are affected. Mozilla too not just Microsoft.
    • and be resold. My 9 year old Athlon XP 3000 ran Win10 just fine until I replaced it with an i5-4590k so I could game on my main TV.

      If anything the pressure will be in reverse as used computers hit the market. Especially in countries that don't pay too close attention to where a Windows license came from.

      Same thing's happening with GPUs. I just got an RX 580 off ebay for $100 bucks shipped and you can get a brand new RX 570 for $130 bucks shipped with two free games.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @04:55PM (#58263548)

    ...for some companies to switch to ARM.

    Who is ready, I wonder?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      What ARM? Who has the fully supported desktop motherboard with consumer RAM, storage, power supply ect ready to go?
      ARM that's not a server?
      ARM thats ready for todays powerful gaming GPU?
      Got the OS and computer game code ready too?
      Got all of todays CPU and GPU intensive games ready on ARM?
    • ...to put Linux on older CPUs.
    • For it to be a great time to switch to ARM, you not only need someone with ARM processors to fit the design you want to put them but also someone with fab capacity at advanced process nodes that can be used to make them. The problem is NO ONE HAS SPARE FAB CAPACITY AT ADVANCED NODES.

  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @05:25PM (#58263824) Homepage

    AMD Ryzen chips are pretty great right now, on both the low and the high end, and there's a significant update coming out mid-year. Moreover, at the low end they ship with much better integrated GPUs. And they're a bit cheaper, too.

    • Moreover, at the low end they ship with much better integrated GPUs.

      Integrated GPU's that still ride on the memory bus. I just built a cheap Ryzen system for a friend and in it went a $20 eBay GT720: Accept no substitutes for discrete graphics.

      • by melted ( 227442 )

        Most people don't play games, and for most of the rest integrated GPU is still quite adequate.

      • Ryzen 5 2400g integrated graphics are about on par with a GT1030, which should be a chunk faster than that GT720.

        Like you said, the shared memory bus is a bottleneck, so I just built one with 2933, which seems to hit the sweet spot with price/performance for RAM:
        https://www.pcper.com/reviews/... [pcper.com]

        It's a heck of a step up in games from the system I was running before (an elderly GTX260 with a quad core FX processor) and the whole thing draws about 1/3 what the old system did running all out (and almost nothing

      • Please tell me you're joking. The Vega RX11 in the Ryzen iGPU is between 4x and 6x faster than a GT720 on it's best day. The Vega RX8 is only a few percent worse than the 11. In a general sense they are on par with current entry level cards like the GTX1030 which is a damn sight faster than your waste of $20.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The problem is people like to buy Intel and are voting with their spending to enjoy Intel CPU products.
      • by melted ( 227442 )

        Intel has been consistently aiming for their own feet over the past couple of years. Maybe people will reconsider their ways. I certainly have.

  • It is crazy there is so much focus on Intel.

  • I mean it. Sooner or later a truly malicious exploit on them is going to come out. It would not surprise me at all if it eventually got traced back to Microsoft trying to force sell more Win 10 licenses by hook or by crook.

  • PC's are the latest rage, who wouldda guessed.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

Working...