Actually, Athlons 64 X2 and Pentium D were similar in price. The only exception being the Pentium D 805, which was under the A64X2 3800+ price when Dual Cores were still brand new.
Besides, there are some places where Intel gets a hefty price premium. I recall that while on Newegg you had things like an Athlon 64 3000+ and a Pentium 4 Prescott 3 GHz at the same price, yet here Intel would command a 20-30% price premium just because brand recognition (AMD as a brand had extremely bad reputation here due to the crappy PC Chips + K6-II combos and later the soldered Duron "Pro" on even more PC Chips Motherboards. But everyone blamed the Processor).
What always amazed me about the K6+ series of chips (K6-2 and 3), was how they took an INTEL designed motherboard and socket, and managed to get roughly twice the MHz performance out of the same motherboard. (Super Socket 7 could still accomodate Pentium chips). Sure, fp performance was noted as lacking, but nonetheless the K6-III chips in particular managed to perform quite well. The K6III chips in particular were noted for having Level 3 cache, which helped considerably with benchmarks, versus the Pentium Pros and such. L3 cache is now pretty much an industry standard, but was a big deal back in the SS7 days...
This also helped keep the prices of the Intel chips around the late '90s down a bit. If AMD hadn't been around, Intel would have charged an even higher premium than they did.
As to AMD 'gouging' the market, as has been noted before, going to a new process node is expensive, and AMD NEVER had a large share of the market. Intel has always had 60% or much higher of the market overall versus AMD. Lower market share equals less money for R&D, hence the need to eek out as much as they could in those 'heady days' of the Athlon architecture.
What you have AMD to thank for is 'awakening the sleeping Intel giant'. Once Intel realized that they were in danger of falling behind, they kicked their CPU development up a notch, and have been dramatically increasing performance steadily ever since.
And, since Intel has a LOT more money to throw at new node processes/die shrinks than AMD, it is inevitable that they are now about 2 nodes ahead of AMD.
Just remember, you have AMD to thank for shaking Intel's confidence in their superiority, just enough to give you the wonderful Haswell, etc. CPU's you see today.
AMD also helped spearhead consumer oriented multicores, 64 bit consumer processors, on die memory controllers, and on die APUs. All good things for the consumer price/performance front, I'd say.
Even Intel's on die graphics are getting MUCH better, thanks to AMD taking a gamble with ATI a few years back.
So, kick AMD all you want. While I agree that Intel is the pretty much undisputed market leader in CPU performance these days, it took AMD nipping at their heels to get them there... in a much shorter amount of time than if they had just 'rested on their laurels', and took their sweet time.
Via was there too of course, but I don't think anyone ever took Via that seriously outside of the Asian rim...
Motorola made a more serious effort, but I remember us 'PC guys' regularly deriding the much inferior performance of Macs back in the late '90s. Apple cultists anyways... even Motorola had to step things up, which was probably too little too late. Apple is now in the Intel camp, something that came as a bit of a shock to Apple enthusiasts when that happened...
We now have ARM and other up and coming CPU manufacturers as well. Which helps keep Intel serious about their own efforts, and serious about maintaining their market share. Which is a good thing I think.
That being said, I'm an unabashed AMD supporter. Because I like choice, and don't need the 'absolute fastest performing consumer CPU on the planet', and AMD delivers sufficient performance for my needs. The only 'generation' of AMD I haven't owned since the K6-III series was the Slot A generation (I do have a Socket A). So you can thank us 'underdog supporters' for your wonderful Intel CPUs being what they are today.
I could bring up the 'multiple Intel socket changes' in the early-mid 2000s that so annoyed many of you, and maybe that Rambus thing, but I think both AMD and Intel are doing much better/about equal on socket longetivity of late.
Anyways, my main reason in replying here was to point out this (now dated) article, as it is relevant to the roadmap mentioned in the first post:
http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/other/...nm_FinFET_Chips_Within_Next_Two_Quarters.html
I don't think we will see any 20nm AMD APUs/CPUs before 2015, but at least they are making progress. Intel should have their 8nm products coming online in 2015. Intel's deep pockets should keep them ahead in the node wars for some time to come, barring some utterly stupid management decisions (I don't see that happening).