- Oct 29, 2003
- 10,505
- 2
- 0
Much is often made of the fact that Intel is such a large company and spends so very much more than AMD (a relatively small company) on research and development, and that even with such relatively paltry expenditures on R&D AMD is able to generally remain competitive. This is often used to shore up support for AMD while trying to deflate the egos of Intel fanatics.
The fundamental truth that is missing is that no amount (low or high) of R&D expense can overcome the basic material and manufacturing limitations of the product/technology that's being improved. The manufacturing methods/processes employed by Intel and GloFo have very specific capabilities, associated costs, and constraints that set the parameters within which microprocessors must be designed to fit. Intel and AMD are also basing their improvements upon specific previous designs and the demands of the markets in which future processors will be sold.
Company size and R&D expenditures are not realistic ways to set performance expectations.
The fundamental truth that is missing is that no amount (low or high) of R&D expense can overcome the basic material and manufacturing limitations of the product/technology that's being improved. The manufacturing methods/processes employed by Intel and GloFo have very specific capabilities, associated costs, and constraints that set the parameters within which microprocessors must be designed to fit. Intel and AMD are also basing their improvements upon specific previous designs and the demands of the markets in which future processors will be sold.
Company size and R&D expenditures are not realistic ways to set performance expectations.
