WhoBeDaPlaya
Diamond Member
- Sep 15, 2000
- 7,415
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I think what AMD is doing now is going after design wins aggressively, and pushing Fusion really hard in the big box stores and etailers. I took a look at the mobile offerings at Best Buy yesterday, and was surprised by two things. One, there was a lot of AMD hardware, E-350, A6 and A8 Fusion stuff. Two, in some cases AMD seems to be commanding a price premium for these units in comparison to similar Intel hardware. Atom has been relegated to the very bottom end and is being discounted.
AMD has superior products in the market right now.What they need to "learn" from Intel or somebody, is how to produce a superior product and get it to market on time.
Intel bribed Dell in one year more than they paid AMD in their settlement. edit - I actually think it was less, something like $500-600 million, but it was a very substantial payment.While Intel may have used unfair practices in the past, they paid AMD a ton of money to settle that.
You believe.And in these days of technical forums and readily available product reviews on the internet, I believe if AMD produced a superior product, people would be aware of it.
Ruby the girl in leather?
Citation please.AMD has superior products in the market right now.
Intel bribed Dell in one year more than they paid AMD in their settlement.
Picture this: You are a top executive at one of the biggest technology companies on the planet. You spent 30 years working your tail off, climbing the corporate ladder, building your reputation, and it all paid off. Youre set for life; you can retire tomorrow and never have to worry about money as long as you live. So what do you do? You leak all kinds of inside information on upcoming earnings releases and a high-profile restructuring and spinoff to a friend at a hedge fund who you know is going to illegally trade a million shares on the information and let another hedge fund manager in on the fun, too.
But youre caught red-handed on tape by the FBI. Poof, its all gone. Just like that.
One is former AMD CEO and Motorola president Hector Ruiz, who yesterday agreed to step down as chairman of AMD spinoff Globalfoundries
Citation please.
The reality is, management within Intel pushed the boundaries of fair play. To increase sales.
There are bad apples that help ruin public opinion and actually undermine the company they work for.
examples.
Galleon Scandal Snags Top IBM and AMD Execs
FBI says Dell and AMD execs sold inside information
I edited my post, but I am not going to go back and re-read all this stuff again.Citation please.
No. Intel didn't care so much about increasing sales, they were desperate to prevent AMD from gaining a substantial foothold. Emails showed that Intel execs were extremely concerned that AMD would gain a reputation of being a technology leader, and that once the ball started rolling, it would be impossible to stop. For you to believe Intel was trying to up sales shows you don't understand the issue at all.The reality is, management within Intel pushed the boundaries of fair play. To increase sales.
This has nothing to with a few bad employees, come on. Your comparisons are way out to lunch IMO.There are bad apples that help ruin public opinion and actually undermine the company they work for.
AMD has superior products in the market right now.
.
Name one product AMD has in the desktop market that is superior to Intel as far as CPU performance goes.
Name one product AMD has in the desktop market that is superior to Intel as far as CPU performance goes.
Don't you remember a thread on here a while back that was saying about a special run of dual core Xeons they did? Clocked at 4.4 GHz.To add to that line of reasoning.
Except that introduces a variable that's dependent on current testing conditions, which is why it's best to compare at base frequencies. That, and if you're thinking of over-clocking, you'll pretty much kiss Turbo goodbye.
And now I'm confirming you don't have much knowledge about this topic again in your second paragraph. I already gave you several examples, and if an application takes advantage of more than one thread (going up to four threads), it's mildly multi-threaded. If you didn't read what I said before, again:
Single-threaded: audio encoding
Mildly multi-threaded: games, web browsers
Multi-threaded: image editing, video encoding, 3D rendering, content creation, file compression/decompression (7-zip, PAR2), compiling, folding, games and productivity.
I'm sorry, but most things are either already multi-threaded or switching to it. Most new games introduced this year are taking advantage of multi-threading, and older games from 08-10 were already mildly multi-threaded (used two to four threads). The only real case you can make for single-threaded applications here is audio encoding.
I guess you could mention the Fusion E-350 vs dual-core Atom + Ion, the Athlon II X3 445 vs Pentium G620, the Phenom II X4 955 vs Core i3 2100 (well, they're fairly even matched overall), and the Phenom II X6 1090T vs the Core i5 2300 (in multi-threaded applications). When you look at over $200, AMD doesn't even have CPUs at that price range since they can't compete with Intel.
I was specifically referring to the desktop. I do like the E-350, but many builders are putting it in 15 inch laptops, which I dont think is the right place for it. I did see the HP dm1v or something like that with an 11 or 12 in screen and the E-350 that was attractive.
As far as the desktop, you are comparing a triple core AMD CPU to the lowest of the low dual core Intel products and a quad core vs a dual core, so I dont think that proves AMD is superior. I will grant they may be competitive on price by adding more cores, but that is all.
Your point is well-taken. As long as the performance benefit is there for a particular price range/bracket, it does not really matter for the users if this is achieved through an extra core, or higher clockspeed, or more/faster cache.And intel is only competitive on cores by adding more transistors in each of them, but thats all.
It's not about the amount you spend, it's about the quality of your marketing. For example, everyone knows the Intel three chord chimes.
Intel:
Three chord chimes
Intel Inside
Bunny Men
BMG
AMD :
Can't think of a single marketing program.