- Apr 4, 2010
- 41
- 4
- 71
Imagine if AMD was of no competition to Intel in the late 90s through mid 2006? Where would we be today?
I mean AMD was very competitive with AMD in the late 90s and very early 2000s with the Athlon and then Athlon XPs competing and holding their own and even exceeding the Pentium 3 and Pentium 4 in some cases. Then Athlon 64 comes about and it bests even the Pentium 4 Northwoods clock for clock.
Then the dual core Athlon 64s come out and are superior to the rushed Pentium Ds
Intel has far more resources and is forced to innovate. They start the Core architecture which evolves into Core 2 which is released in mid 2006 and they smoke AMD's Athlon dual cores and Intel has had the performance crown at the top ever since and have not looked back.
Imagine had their been no AMD. Where would we stand today. Would Intel have just as good of CPUs' but far more expensive? Or would we be stuck on still Pentium 4 CPU level performance? Or maybe at Core Duo or Core 2 Duo with Quads costing thousands instead of the Core i7s we have today.
Now with AMD not pushing much competition (even after 2006, AMD still had some competition in the mid range and value market, but now they do not have much for any new modern CPU), Intel seems to leave us stuck at 4 cores for mainstream.
I mean AMD was very competitive with AMD in the late 90s and very early 2000s with the Athlon and then Athlon XPs competing and holding their own and even exceeding the Pentium 3 and Pentium 4 in some cases. Then Athlon 64 comes about and it bests even the Pentium 4 Northwoods clock for clock.
Then the dual core Athlon 64s come out and are superior to the rushed Pentium Ds
Intel has far more resources and is forced to innovate. They start the Core architecture which evolves into Core 2 which is released in mid 2006 and they smoke AMD's Athlon dual cores and Intel has had the performance crown at the top ever since and have not looked back.
Imagine had their been no AMD. Where would we stand today. Would Intel have just as good of CPUs' but far more expensive? Or would we be stuck on still Pentium 4 CPU level performance? Or maybe at Core Duo or Core 2 Duo with Quads costing thousands instead of the Core i7s we have today.
Now with AMD not pushing much competition (even after 2006, AMD still had some competition in the mid range and value market, but now they do not have much for any new modern CPU), Intel seems to leave us stuck at 4 cores for mainstream.
Last edited: