


Intel Struggles To Reverse AMD's Share Gains In x86 CPU Market (crn.com) 27
An anonymous reader shared this report from CRN:
CPU-tracking firm Mercury Research reported on Thursday that Intel's x86 CPU market share grew 0.3 points sequentially to 75.6 percent against AMD's 24.4 percent in the first quarter. However, AMD managed to increase its market share by 3.6 points year over year. These figures only captured the server, laptop and desktop CPU segments. When including IoT and semicustom products, AMD grew its x86 market share sequentially by 1.5 points and year over year by 0.9 points to 27.1 percent against Intel's 72.9 percent... AMD managed to gain ground on Intel in the desktop and server segments sequentially and year over year. But it was in the laptop segment where Intel eked out a sequential share gain, even though rival AMD ended up finishing the first quarter with a higher share of shipments than what it had a year ago...
While AMD mostly came out on top in the first quarter, [Mercury Research President Dean] McCarron said ARM's estimated CPU share against x86 products crossed into the double digits for the first time, growing 2.3 points sequentially to 11.9 percent. This was mainly due to a "surge" of Nvidia's Grace CPUs for servers and a large increase of Arm CPU shipments for Chromebooks.
Meanwhile, PC Gamer reports that ARM's share of the PC processor market "grew to 13.6% in the first quarter of 2025 from 10.8% in the fourth quarter of 2024." And they note the still-only-rumors that an Arm-based chip from AMD will be available as soon next year. [I]f one of the two big players in x86 does release a mainstream Arm chip for the PC, that will very significant. If it comes at about the same time as Nvidia's rumoured Arm chip for the PC, well, momentum really will be building and questioning x86's dominance will be wholly justified.
While AMD mostly came out on top in the first quarter, [Mercury Research President Dean] McCarron said ARM's estimated CPU share against x86 products crossed into the double digits for the first time, growing 2.3 points sequentially to 11.9 percent. This was mainly due to a "surge" of Nvidia's Grace CPUs for servers and a large increase of Arm CPU shipments for Chromebooks.
Meanwhile, PC Gamer reports that ARM's share of the PC processor market "grew to 13.6% in the first quarter of 2025 from 10.8% in the fourth quarter of 2024." And they note the still-only-rumors that an Arm-based chip from AMD will be available as soon next year. [I]f one of the two big players in x86 does release a mainstream Arm chip for the PC, that will very significant. If it comes at about the same time as Nvidia's rumoured Arm chip for the PC, well, momentum really will be building and questioning x86's dominance will be wholly justified.
Shhh... (Score:1)
don't say "86," someone might think you are out to get rid of a competitor.
86 (Score:2)
I never understood the reference to '86 (I wasn't born in the USA)
Is it something to do with Don Adams? (Get Smart)
Re: (Score:1)
I don't know if your question is in gest or not, but the x86 refers to the CPU-architecture that was first introduced with the Intel 8086 processor that was released in 1978.
Re: 86 (Score:2)
The question was about why 86 means to get rid of something. The hidden meaning is so convoluted to the point that 8647 is interpreted by the US Secret Services as a threat against the POTUS.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
https://www.nbcnews.com/politi... [nbcnews.com]
Re: (Score:2)
That interpretation didn't even cross my mind and I didn't see the AC post he responded to, so thanks for the clarification.
Re: (Score:2)
The same idiots crying about this are the same ones that said 8646.
Its a red herring and another distraction to what is actually happening to our country.
The joke above is good, but its terribly dumb that its even a joke.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: 86 (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The fact that the US media is going in a circle jerk around this idiocy just shows how controlled the US media is.
This is by no means unique to US media. Remember, for example, when European media threw a hissy fit because in the background of some video Greta Thunberg posted there was a plush toy Octopus [spiegel.de] visible?
Re: (Score:1)
I never understood the reference to '86 (I wasn't born in the USA)
Is it something to do with Don Adams? (Get Smart)
86 is slang to kill someone. Such as, "I need you to 86 Paulie cus he didn't do the job I paid him to do."
uh (Score:1)
Re: 86 (Score:2)
It's a 1920s gangster culture meme. When the mob boss said to 86 someone it meant to take them 8 miles out of town and put them 6 feet under, handy that it also rhymes with nix which was also used in the same context. At some point the military started to use it in their lingo in the general sense of to get rid of something, restaurants and bars started to use it to mean to eject a patron or refuse service.
Re: (Score:2)
The Get Smart character was a pun on the idea.
To 86 [the item] meant to get rid of it, or to toss it over the side while I was in the Navy.
As mentioned below it had a related meaning in the food service business.
ARM share in PC processor market (Score:2)
ARM increasing market share in the server area is no surprise, given that they appear to be just cheaper than comparable x86 hardware, at least when you do not need the maximum single-thread perfor
Re: ARM share in PC processor market (Score:2)
I'm not a "gamer", but most of my gaming is done on an ARM CPU, that is on a Mac. Same for my son.
We get to play Minecraft, Terraria and some retro games on these ARM cpus.
We also have and old Wii, PlayStations, and handheld retro consoles. The retro consoles usually have an ARM CPU.
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I'm not a "gamer", but most of my gaming is done on an ARM CPU, that is on a Mac. Same for my son.
We get to play Minecraft, Terraria and some retro games on these ARM cpus.
We also have and old Wii, PlayStations, and handheld retro consoles. The retro consoles usually have an ARM CPU.
Sorry to interject, but the Wii and the PS3 use PowerPC. since PS4, it is X86. Depending on the handheld retro console, you would be surprised by the odball architectures used. PS1 and 2 also use some odball thing, but is not ARM.
Written from my 2018 x86 MacMini. Nothing wrong with having an ARM mac, and playing on it. Having said that, I game on mac by bootcamping + my trusty sonnet TB3 eGPU enclosure (currently Robocop Rogue City, I am a little behind the curve)
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If "PC Gamer" writes about CPUs, I would have assumed they primarily mean PCs used for gaming, and I am surprised to read that 13% of those would be powered by ARM CPUs these days. Nintendo's switch or smartphones certainly do not qualify as PCs, and laptops with ARM CPUs are probably not widely used for gaming.
ARM increasing market share in the server area is no surprise, given that they appear to be just cheaper than comparable x86 hardware, at least when you do not need the maximum single-thread performance.
Actually, you can get insane performance from ARM. Ask fujitsu.
X86-64 on the server will go the way of the mainframe, running legacy workloads at decent speeds with decent reliability.
Compete. (Score:2)
The proper title is "Intel Struggles To Compete with AMD". Given how Intel has done business for the last four decades, it should be no surprise that once they lost their ability to be coercive that they would struggle to compete. Intel will continue losing until they change or figure out a new way to cheat, and don't expect them to change.
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I've gone with AMD for every build I've done, even when the chips were slower than Intel. On principle, to keep competition alive.
I'll be building a new desktop later this year, and I may do something similar for the GPU. Buy AMD even though the nVidia cards are faster.
I also prefer to buy American, even though it costs more. Although there typically isn't an American option available for most things.
And? (Score:2)
I've gone with AMD for every build I've done, even when the chips were slower than Intel. On principle, to keep competition alive.
The margins for consumer products are quite thin (to keep new competitors out) which is why the "server market" is vastly more important. Buyers in this market (businesses) will not expend resources based on principle.
Re: (Score:2)
Intel basically did nothing for four years if not more.
The Iris Pro 5200 from 2014 benchmarked at 1200. I had an i5-4570R with that onboard GPU and it was entirely adequate.
The HD 630 from 2018 benchmarked at 1100. WTF? No gain at all in four years? What were you doing? Oh, stock buybacks.
For the record my current CPU is a Ryzen 4600G at 2400. It came out in 2020.
What I would really like to see in X86-64 (Score:2)
Is Centaur resurrecting the CNS core as a laptop chip, compatible with Win11 (or even 12, one can dream).
Reports are contradictory on the AI side, some say it had an NPU, other say it had extra instructions (similar to intel's AVX-VNNI), but no matter what was the case, it was capable of doing a decent TOPS. All of this with 2019 TSMC 16nm tech.
Imagine the same chip in TSMC's 4nm+ with a DX12 FL12.1 PowerVR GPU, aimed at laptops...
One can dream, and we need competition both in the X86-64 market , and in the
Marketing Can Not Solve Incomptence (Score:2)
While everyone was innovation out there, Intel thought it could stick to their pre-21st century proven technologies by slapping meaningless buzzwords on their products.