Yep, all in all, not a bad report - they met EPS expectations and exceeded revenue expectations. I say not bad considering their forecast way prior to Sept.11 was for revenue between $6.2 and $6.8 Billion. With all the economic fallout since Sept. 11, to be able to still come in at the midpoint of the original forecasted revenue range is not too shabby at all. Even more remarkable since nearly every PC maker's business has totally tanked since Sept. 11, with the notable exception of DELL. As the old saying goes, "As goes DELL, so goes Intel." There's something to be said for J.I.T. for sure.
Bottomline, sure beats having to report a quarter $Billion loss like some other companies will.
<< Intel has a diverse CPU lineup in many markets - I think XScale/ARM will dominate handhelds, which are IMO 'The Next Big Thing (tm)' >>
I don't disagree ... indeed, their XScale/StrongARM will be a major force. In fact, Transmeta already appears to be on "life support" (CEO #3 selected yesterday in an "emergency meeting"), and Palm and many others have already committed to XScale.
As for market share percentages, they appear to have become static. Both companies are claiming small gains, but from prelim data I got today from J. Joseph, Smith Barney's semi analyst, the numbers are essentially unchanged, though both companies are claiming slight increases in the number of CPUs shipped, as well as some small gains in FLASH. You have to be careful when looking at either company's claims, as sometimes the market share they report will be for the entire CPU market, whereas other times they will only report their share of a particular segment, such as desktop. Obviously it looks rosiest for AMD if you only talk about the desktop segment, and it looks best for Intel when you talk about the entire market. You just have to make sure you are comparing apples to apples, esp. when neither company is interested in ensuring that you do so.