Even a blind chicken finds the odd kernel of corn.
Yeah like the blue brigade foretelling the end of times for AMD, ARM, Apple for the better part of this decade?
And what, pray tell, is so "egregious" about Intel's margins?
Well for one they expect everyone to pay the Wintel tax even when Windows' marketshare is being corroded to the point that MS will be a non player in anything that doesn't sit on your desk come the next decade. The server monopoly is also a happy of consequence of Wintel duopoly (as IBM left the field), again the process lead they have is being eroded & against a horde of chipmakers that may or may not be aiming for (their own?) servers I see Intel ~
a) becoming a shadow of their current self if they don't start lowering their margins eventually because the largest tech firms all have within them the ability to pull something like that off.
b) accept the fate of low(er) margins as the new normal & stay relevant till they carve a niche into something like IoT, the latter may or may not be the next big bubble waiting to burst.
The electronics industry as a whole has moved towards "disposable" products, to put it simply consumers expect more perf for their $ (even though the performance is stagnating) & are not going to pay a premium
just for performance. As of today I could get a 2GB (RAM) LTE smartphone with Snapdragon 410 for as little as $85 off contract, in a fire sale. The reason Apple gets a premium is because they bundle their software ecosystem with such devices, iOS & OS X both command a premium due to the Apple
experience. So unless Intel gets another breakthrough, like graphene or SiGe, come 7nm ARM will be (too) close to them in the server arena in terms of relative performance & they don't suffer from the same perf/W ailment that has hurt AMD in the past. It just takes one to set an example & then we'll see the floodgates open.
Anyone not having their own software or services ecosystem in the coming decade is ill positioned as the electronics (& semiconductor) industry as a whole is moving towards low margin, high volume products.