AMD Tanking in Workstations, 2 in a Series

By DE Editors

A decade or so ago AMD seemed on its last legs. The company’s only sales proposition was to sell clones of Intel chips cheaper than Intel.

Then AMD started taking chances. It pushed clock speeds to their heat-producing limits, caught Intel off guard with dual and multicore products, and when it came to 64-bits, it didn’t really give a hoot about Intel compatibility. The result was a graphics lover’s dream. Game machines and design workstations increasingly had “AMD Inside” instead of Intel.

But Intel fought back with faster processors and aggressive pricing (and some hard-nosed negotiation and OEM perks) and has largely taken back the workstation market, at least according to Jon Peddie Research.

In the first quarter of this year, AMD’s Opteron fell to 8 percent market share leaving the Xeon with the remaining 92 percent. Sounds like the Intel monopoly is solidly back.

AMD
Sunnyvale, CA
amd.com

Intel
Santa Clara, CA
intel.com

Share This Article

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.


About the Author

DE Editors's avatar
DE Editors

DE’s editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering.
Press releases may be sent to them via [email protected].

Follow DE
#9733