Combining discrete graphics and integrated graphics into one number never makes sense to me.
Combining discrete graphics and integrated graphics into one number never makes sense to me.
No, iGPUs are not marching. nVidia's GPU business is bigger than AMD's CPU business - revenue and margins.
Exactly. This has been the case for years, anyone who said otherwise is an idiot.uhh...
You do realize Intel makes iGPU's as well? And that their performance has been jumping up to nearly match what AMD's iGPU's can do? Which means nVidia will soon have zero low end market share. No OEM is going to put in a discrete card when the iGPU matches its performance.
AMD and Intel will effectively squeeze out nVidia on the low end, and will slow start to on the mid range as well. Especially with GPU's being stuck on 28nm.
So quickly translated:
IGPs keep marching on while eroding discrete volume.
uhh...
You do realize Intel makes iGPU's as well? And that their performance has been jumping up to nearly match what AMD's iGPU's can do? Which means nVidia will soon have zero low end market share. No OEM is going to put in a discrete card when the iGPU matches its performance.
AMD and Intel will effectively squeeze out nVidia on the low end, and will slow start to on the mid range as well. Especially with GPU's being stuck on 28nm.
So, something that could help explain the numbers, because right now I don't see how they add up:
Does this also include Xbox One and PS4 sales as AMD GPUs?
No, iGPUs are not marching. nVidia's GPU business is bigger than AMD's CPU business - revenue and margins.
So, something that could help explain the numbers, because right now I don't see how they add up:
Does this also include Xbox One and PS4 sales as AMD GPUs?
Nvidia is not bigger than AMD (in the PC market). They may make more profits, sure. These results show clearly that AMD as a whole sells more graphics chips in the PC market than nvidia. Amd igp, apu, and dgpu is higher in volume than nvidia dgpus.
JPR said:Year-to-year this quarter AMD’s overall PC shipments decreased 22%, Intel increased 4.2%, Nvidia decreased 12.7%, and others essentially went away.
I feel pretty soon that discrete GPU's in laptops will only be in the 1200$+ segment.
Market share for this quarter last year vs. this year:
Amd: 21.9% --> 17.9%
Intel: 61.7% --> 67.3%
NVIDIA: 16.2% --> 14.7%
AMD said in their Q2 numbers that the GPU business was down from Q1. So i guess they are selling these mobile parts for nearly no profit and with a very low ASP.
It doesnt change the numbers anyway in the terms of the trend. Its quite clear what happens and its not in favour of discrete GPUs.
It doesnt change the numbers anyway in the terms of the trend. Its quite clear what happens and its not in favour of discrete GPUs.
That is not true at all.
Without the console deals nVidia's GPU business is nearly as big as AMD's whole GPU and CPU business.
Does not AMD separate APU sales into separate category, such that CPU are simply units without an integrated graphics (ie opteron, fx).nVidia's Q2 was their best in history.
AMD's CPU business hit a nearly all-time low.
Which is the company selling iGPUs in the x86 market?:hmm:
That is not true at all.
Without the console deals nVidia's GPU business is nearly as big as AMD's whole GPU and CPU business.
Lets take Haswell, all those Celerons and Pentiums with low end HD Intel graphics. In one two years lots of them will need to upgrade their GPUs.
Guess what, they will use a sub $100 dGPU. Even todays sub $100 GPUs are way faster than those Intel HD graphics not to mention 20-16nm FF entry level dGPUs in two years time.