kevinsbane
Senior member
- Jun 16, 2010
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And even if you were right about the second point, what exactly is the relevance of the first? It's not as if the two numbers are comparable anyways - I mean, it's not as if anyone has the numbers for all of the money people put into upgrades of their processor (such as paying $200 to go from an i5 -> i7) on prebuilts either. It's a useless metric to use.Not at all. As I understand it by "final market value" TSMC means what their customers (e.g. Qualcomm) in turn sell their chips for to their customers (e.g. Samsung or Sony).
Saying that this compares to the sales of all products that have an Intel CPU in them is just ridiculous, because then you are adding the sales value of all other components in those products (e.g. SSD, motherboard, RAM, etc).
If you want to use a number to impress people, use one which actually makes sense. To compare "final market value" for one company to "total revenue" for another is not only useless, but actively misleading.
Here's a number which is actually useful.
TSMC Q2 Revenue: $5.1B
Intel Q2 Revenue: $12.8B
Edit:
And believing the article when it says that "TSMC is the largest integrated circuit manufacturer" is like believing Samsung when it says that their Note 3 is the fastest smartphone on the planet. Perhaps true, but still full of shenanigans and fuzzy math.
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