First, my post was based on my assumption that you were posting the theory in question as an absolute fact - when it is a theory. On that note - while it is an incredibly well written and academic theory it is still one that I do not agree with. Anyway, I was wrong in that initial assumption, so apologies about that.
It's fine, and I'm happy to see that you took my snarky response so well.
Would *you* trust the US government to run or oversee the state of affairs of Intel? That would be a complete disaster.
Anyway, with regard to AMD - I share your dislike for current AMD CPUs - but I should state that while AMD is merely a blip on the radar these days, AMD did advance the state of x86 in prior years.
Right. And no, I don't trust the US government to handle things, particularly with the clowns running it that we have today.
A monopoly in today's society would be absolutely terrible. There's far too much corruption, even in the US, to have any hope of a "good" monopoly. I'd still argue that
some good is intrinsic to all monopolies, but the cons far outweigh the pros at this point in time. I think that maybe someday it could work, but that's a whole different story.
And yes, AMD absolutely has had a positive effect on the CPU industry, but their influence is next to nil now. The repercussions that would occur if AMD were to go out of business would be pretty minor at this point -- the "negative" consequences have already occurred. In the meantime, Intel has another fire under its ass right now, and since their war chest is already so fattened thanks to AMD's failures, we should be seeing a lot of progress when it comes to affordable, power efficient computing.
Things are only barely starting to get interesting, though. I can't wait until Silvermont makes it to the market, and we begin to see what changes occur in the industry as a result of Intel's refocusing. We're already getting tremendous battery life jumps with Haswell... it will only get better from here.
Silvermont shouldn't be high-performing enough in the context of making a huge difference when it comes to notebooks and low power/cheap desktops, but we're getting there. I totally agree with the philosophy that there's a level of performance that's "enough" for most people. We're mostly there already... even a 17W IVB has a lot of muscle behind it. It won't be long before Atom's in a similar position for far less.
Regardless, it's exciting to see (perhaps moreso) that the peak performance boundaries are still being pushed, in spite of a lack of competition. I'm really itching to see what is coming with Skylake... Haswell was a pretty conservative move on the CPU side of things, and we're due for something big.
Props for resuming not only what I think regarding economic theory (and most social "sciences", mind you), but also helping describe why citing papers on economics is almost trivial. For any whacky theory you might cite, I can assure you anyone can google another one contradicting it in a matter of seconds.
But to think that someone would go such lengths into rationalizing that a monopoly would be good in any kind of market is no ordinary feat (not in the good sense, im afraid). Good for him, I guess.
Whatever makes you feel better about yourself. At this point, you're just trying to save face. It would have been a much better idea to have accepted the fact that your opposition has a point.