Why Intel is STRUGGLING Against AMD

Why Intel is STRUGGLING Against AMD

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Why Intel is STRUGGLING Against AMD”.
When AMD launched their Zen architecture CPUs, we did an episode about what we could expect from their new lineup and whether team red could finally be a serious competitor to Intel again. If you missed that one, you can check it out up here, but come on back afterwards, because it’s been over two years now and it’s time to have a look at how Intel has started to struggle against a resurgent AMD. In fact, from late 2017 to late 2018, AMD’s market share increased by three point: eight percent on desktop three point: four percent in servers and 5.2 percent in notebooks and seeing as Intel is the player in all of these markets. Anything that AMD games reflects a loss for Intel, but why exactly is this happening well, for a long time, AMD was forced into a strategy of competing on Raw price to performance, as for a long time that they simply couldn’t make any chips that could come close To the performance of Intel’s offerings, forcing them to cut prices Intel by contrast, could to a point anyway charge whatever they wanted, as they didn’t have any real competition at the higher end. This allowed them to make much more margin. All of this changed, however, with AMD’s news and architecture and although rise in legs a bit behind Intel in some performance metrics, notably gaming AMD having spent so many years operating on lower margins, took a fundamentally different approach to their CPU design. That worked really well to save R .