Originally posted by: golem
Well there is some truth in that...however looking at it in a more economy 101 way...intel effectively choked demand for a chip that rightfully so should have sold for more based on its performance. Companies were being strong armed into running an inferior line. ....Everyone knows high demand low supply would equal higher price....I think AMD had some other avenues if needed to get out more supply if needed. Don't just take the assumption because reportedly they sold everything they made as being they couldn't have made anymore through fab efficiencies, older fab conversions, renting fab space from companies (and oh yes there are some around the world that do this)
I don't really see this at all. The channels where you can make the most profit per chip from are not the OEMs if you are capacity constrained. They are willing to pay the least because of they expect a volume discount. Since AMD was selling all they could, they would have to divert chips from the more profitable open market to the more steady, but less profitable OEMs.
The might have been able to convert older fabs, but weren't they already doing this at Dresden? Even at their most profitable years, it was a financial stress to convert 1 fab, and that was with generous subsidies from the German government. Would they have been able to convert another one with less profit from OEM sales?
Generally the CPU companies have the most advanced Fabs. AMD is currently farming out chip production to some outside foundries, but isn't this with the less advanced X2 chips? They are producing all Phenoms in house.
So, If they were selling all they could make in the most profitable channel they could, how would introducing demand from a less profitable channel work?
Prices are not higher today, because Intel wants to set an effective ceiling on what AMD can charge by pricing their low to mid end chips at around 200 to 300. AMD cannot go above this level because thier best chips don't beat Intels mid level chips. This was not the case back then when both companies priced their best chips 900+, only intel can do that now.
That is assumming OEMs wanted them for their low end machines which they sell huge amounts of....The were black-balled from even selling higher end performance chips where they could have made the money. Intel had no answer except over cached heat boxes....
I think you are looking a little too narrow and a little too simple...
Same OEMs they were blocked out of sold workstation boxes where AMD could have made vast amounts of money selling more opterons....
Also when I said prices I wasn't looking at the anamoly of the Q6600...It is quite clear what INtel trying to do there, but look at the price points for each mhz jump there after...they are huge reminding me of the older days...
PLus somehow once again I am thinking you cannot seem to get past what the Q6600 can do in terms of stock 2.4ghz performance but its prowess after you OC it.. I dont think the current price would be all screaming deal at 2.4ghz alone. Yeah it screams becuz I know I can OC it to 3.4-3.6ghz....
I am talking about lack of competition leading to prices we are starting t see and going to see with nehalem. AMD wasn't as weak when the Core 2 or quads came out....however now they are looking downright anemic....This is where we are going to take it in the shorts.
Again do not look at cpus for overclocking value....we enthusiast make up a very small fraction of the market.