10 years ago we had Core 2 chips...I look at it like consumer electronics. How many TV makers are their out there? Black Friday had 55" 4K Smart TVs with options galore on sale $289! Intel cut the throat of the only competition, AMD, with anti-competitive practices, and was only slapped on the hand. We as a nation didn't/don't care enough to say or do anything about it. 10 years of quad cores and ~4 generations of rebranded CPU's, and they still cost the same as they did 10 years ago. Despite massive cost saving from shrinking the process node. We are blind fools.
10 years ago we had Core 2 chips...
$500 in 2007 is about $600 today.
$250 in 2007 is about $300 today.
For the same money today, you get a shedload more performance.
The $117.00 msrp i3-8100 probably handily demolishes the 2007 top end desktop chips.
Did we ever have 10 competitive high end CPU makers in the desktop PC market?
The overall desktop PC market has been shrinking markedly in the last decade or so.
The specific gaming desktop PC market is a little healthier, but we have not needed huge CPU gains in that arena until very recently with games beginning to want more than 4 cores.
Mostly we have needed GPU upgrades, which we have gotten regularly due to gamers (and miners) who have to have the latest GPU as soon as it's mentioned.
10 competitive CPU makers would probably never have survived the last decade, even if Intel was not one of them. They'd have been whittled right down pretty fast, I think.
How many car companies are there?Are cars a nickle nowadays?This field is not an isolated case that it is invulnerable to economics. It's just being dictated by a monopoly, and as anywhere a monopoly exists you will find the same stagnation and inflated prices. This very reason is why a monopoly is against the law in the first place. It's counter productive.
How many car companies are there?Are cars a nickle nowadays?
Cars just like CPU have reached their apex years ago,decades for the cars actually,as soon as they improve everything easily improvable research costs skyrocket so each new product with even the slightest improvement is still expensive.
Same goes for so many things,why is furniture still so expensive? They haven't changed anything on the table for like thousands of years and everybody makes them.
The $117.00 msrp i3-8100 probably handily demolishes the 2007 top end desktop chips.
Not really, or even close
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i3-8100+@+3.60GHz&id=3103
I don't see any 2007 desktop chips at your link, and I don't think Passmark is a reliable source, but I can tell you that in Passmark an i3-7100 2 core chip will demolish a Q6600 4 core chip, even if the Q6600 is overclocked.Not really, or even close
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i3-8100+@+3.60GHz&id=3103
Well, let's really look at that selection.Not really, or even close
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i3-8100+@+3.60GHz&id=3103
buy AMD like me XD but short sell their stocks.I look at it like consumer electronics. How many TV makers are their out there? Black Friday had 55" 4K Smart TVs with options galore on sale $289! Intel cut the throat of the only competition, AMD, with anti-competitive practices, and was only slapped on the hand. We as a nation didn't/don't care enough to say or do anything about it. 10 years of quad cores and ~4 generations of rebranded CPU's, and they still cost the same as they did 10 years ago. Despite massive cost saving from shrinking the process node. We are blind fools.
I was comparing consumer electronics, specifically TVs, where the material cost have drastically reduced(just like CPUs), and competition is aggressive and plentiful(unlike CPU market). As for Furniture/Car market depends on location. If no one is trying to undercut anyone else, and price can remain 300-1200% above cost! There are markets where companies agree with their competition on what they want to set the price. Price fixing! It's illegal and companies get caught, and others get away with it. Government isn't the best caretaker/regulator, but I'd rather have it than not.
I'm talking about lack of plentiful aggressive competition and monopolies as it pertains to economics. The product doesn't matter. We didn't have 10 manufactures when the first TV was built, and I'm sure that building the first one was hard to do. I'm talking about drastic reduction in material costs with hardly any change in price. AMD is an example of what 1 competitor can do for the industry. Last year 8 core 6900K and 6950K sold for ~$1,200 and ~$1800. 9 Months ago AMD is selling 6 and 8 cores for ~$200 and ~$300 that can outperform those Broadwell chips in streaming and some multithreading applications, and Intel is selling 10 core CPU's for $959.89. Almost half the cost of 9 months ago, and increased HEDT core count 80% to 18. Intel added 50% more cores to their mainstream line after ~10 years of quad cores. Add 8 more aggressive competitive CPU manufactures 10 years ago, and CPU's today would be exponentially more powerful, and cost a nickel(slight exaggeration how much does sand cost?).Hate to tell you, but there is a big difference between designing, building, and validating a TV and a cpu.
I'm talking about lack of plentiful aggressive competition and monopolies as it pertains to economics. The product doesn't matter. We didn't have 10 manufactures when the first TV was built, and I'm sure that building the first one was hard to do. I'm talking about drastic reduction in material costs with hardly any change in price. AMD is an example of what 1 competitor can do for the industry. Last year 8 core 6900K and 6950K sold for ~$1,200 and ~$1800. 9 Months ago AMD is selling 6 and 8 cores for ~$200 and ~$300 that can outperform those Broadwell chips in streaming and some multithreading applications, and Intel is selling 10 core CPU's for $959.89. Almost half the cost of 9 months ago, and increased HEDT core count 80% to 18. Intel added 50% more cores to their mainstream line after ~10 years of quad cores. Add 8 more aggressive competitive CPU manufactures 10 years ago, and CPU's today would be exponentially more powerful, and cost a nickel(slight exaggeration how much does sand cost?).
Intel also added 50% of processing power to the haswell g3258 (3.2Ghz -> 4.8Ghz) with zero new product from amd.Intel added 50% more cores to their mainstream line after ~10 years of quad cores. Add 8 more aggressive competitive CPU manufactures 10 years ago, and CPU's today would be exponentially more powerful, and cost a nickel(slight exaggeration how much does sand cost?).
Intel also added 50% of processing power to the haswell g3258 (3.2Ghz -> 4.8Ghz) with zero new product from amd.
With skylake they went crazy and everything could be overclocked giving a huge performance boost to every CPU, again nothing from amd in sight.
With kaby they gave HTT to the pentium for a 30% increase in the worst case scenario and up to 100% increase in gaming...also the official i3-7350k and again nothing from amd to justify any of it.
Just because things coincide doesn't mean that one caused the other.
This is the point I was getting at. Pretty much any manufacturer can throw together components and make a TV. The economic and technical barrier to entry is much higher for cpus. Also there is the general principle that technology improves rapidly early in the life cycle of a product and becomes increasingly (exponentially??) more difficult as the product matures. I am an old timer, and we *did* see the kind of price/performance improvements the OP is talking about early in the life cycle of cpus and computers, but we are far past that point now.There is some naivety here. CPU's have to be built in super expensive fabs on the latest processes. It is also a market that is very hard to get into.
No doubt competition helps. AMD has proven that big time this year. But take your, "How much does sand cost?", there is more to it then that. Someone has to pay for those fabs. Then there is R&D, packaging, validation, and this thing that some think is evil these days, profit. I'm sure I missed some other expenses as well. THe idea that if there was more competition then CPU prices would be close to the price of the silicon that goes into them is a bit shortsighted.
You may consider yourself an "old timer," but can you comment about the rapid progress we saw in CRT TV's? That supports your point about initial wild and rapid improvement of devices followed by slow improvement. In fact, CRT's were supplanted by flatscreens, which are showing the same kinds of proliferating improvements now. Or consider aircraft: jets improved, first the shapes and now the amount of fuel they burn. But by now they all look alike. And cars. I my youth we saw many cars dead on the side of the road. Now by comparison hardly any. As you so rightly point out, all products exhibit a J-curve.This is the point I was getting at. Pretty much any manufacturer can throw together components and make a TV. The economic and technical barrier to entry is much higher for cpus. Also there is the general principle that technology improves rapidly early in the life cycle of a product and becomes increasingly (exponentially??) more difficult as the product matures. I am an old timer, and we *did* see the kind of price/performance improvements the OP is talking about early in the life cycle of cpus and computers, but we are far past that point now.
In fact, we are pretty much topped out in clockspeed and ipc. All that is left is moar cores, and there is a limit to that, both in designing the chip and having software that can utilize it. With all the ranting for AMD and competition, they really did not bring any technical advance over what was already available. In fact both clockspeed and ipc are lower than what was already available. All they brought was lower prices, which is a good thing of course, but far from the 20 core, 10ghz, 25.00 (or whatever) cpus some are claiming would have been available if only evil intel hadnt squashed all the competition. Of course, without Intel, we could have been using Vishera for the last 5 years. And I dont want to hear how it is Intel's fault that AMD brought out that inefficient chip. Clearly it was a poor design choice, since they managed to bring out a much more competitive cpu in Zen when in a worse financial position.
This is the point I was getting at. Pretty much any manufacturer can throw together components and make a TV. The economic and technical barrier to entry is much higher for cpus. Also there is the general principle that technology improves rapidly early in the life cycle of a product and becomes increasingly (exponentially??) more difficult as the product matures. I am an old timer, and we *did* see the kind of price/performance improvements the OP is talking about early in the life cycle of cpus and computers, but we are far past that point now.
I understand economics perfectly well. In fact, I have an MBA. I just disagree with your oversimplified viewpoint."can't see the forest for the trees" The "product" does not matter, and like I said previously the lack of understanding of economics is creating a learning curve. Corporations are not inherently evil, but they are inherently profit driven(and there is no clause saying they have to be moral), and Intel has been found guilty of anti-competitive practices since the creation of AMD, so Intel wouldn't have a monopoly. Well, that didn't work now did it. Several of you seamly believe that, because it's too hard plentiful aggressive competitive competition wouldn't lead to any innovation or reduction in price with a drastic reduction in material cost! I'm sorry but this just shows a lack of fundamental understanding in economics.
I understand economics perfectly well. In fact, I have an MBA. I just disagree with your oversimplified viewpoint.
And to reinforce that: generic drug makers conspired so that only one company would make each of the formerly patnented drugs. Prices have gone up drastically on those.Okay, let's break it down by defining the variables in simplest terms. What is a monopoly? Why is it good to have competition? What happens when there is a drastic reduction in material cost in a field driven by a monopoly?
1. As the sole providers of a product or service, monopolies have no competition and no price restrictions. ... If left unmonitored and unregulated, monopolies can adversely affect businesses, consumers and even the economy.
2. Competition exists in every field, and, believe it or not, can actually be good for your venture. Competition leads to innovation. ... Competition shakes off complacency. If your company is consistently trying to innovate and better itself, your employees will be encouraged to push themselves.
3. 10 years of quad cores, 4 years of rebranded cpus, and cooperation making more than 50% in gross profits!
It's also possible that Intel isn't increasing performance and reducing price because they don't want to create a monopoly so they are just staying ahead of AMD as much as legally makes sense. That's surely only a small part of the (possible) reasons though.Okay, let's break it down by defining the variables in simplest terms. What is a monopoly? Why is it good to have competition? What happens when there is a drastic reduction in material cost in a field driven by a monopoly?
1. As the sole providers of a product or service, monopolies have no competition and no price restrictions. ... If left unmonitored and unregulated, monopolies can adversely affect businesses, consumers and even the economy.
2. Competition exists in every field, and, believe it or not, can actually be good for your venture. Competition leads to innovation. ... Competition shakes off complacency. If your company is consistently trying to innovate and better itself, your employees will be encouraged to push themselves.
3. 10 years of quad cores, 4 years of rebranded cpus, and cooperation making more than 50% in gross profits!