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Comments on: AMD chief condemns Intel 'abuses'

Ehem. . . Monopoly? 

Posted Thursday 21st June 2007 21:57 GMT

Last I checked, AMD were gaining market share until they got PWN3D by the Core and Core2 Architectures. Intel is playing fair, and AMD just lost the technology lead.

Pacifier for Hector Ruiz, Plz... 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 03:45 GMT

Someone need to give Hector Ruiz a pacifier PLEASE... So he stops whinnin n cryin...

Hector tries to misinterpretes Intel's innovations and R & D as a monopoly...

If Hector really cares about AMD he should step down...that would be a great & much needed favor to AMD

Title 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 04:39 GMT

How dare they make better chips than us. it is just not fair, can you make them go back to netburst for us?

AMD and google... 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 05:17 GMT

AMD buys out ATI, starts losing market again to intel and still has CHEAPER cpu's than intel and they are COMPLAINING?

Whats going on with these big companies whining so much to US Anti-trust boards?

Monopoly 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 08:13 GMT

Whether Intel have gained a technology lead is irrelevant; as it happens, I agree that Core and Core2 are outstanding developments, but that has no bearing upon the questions of whether Intel have a dominant market position and whether they have been abusing that market position. It's difficult to argue against the first, and as to the second, Intel have repeatedly been found guilty of unlawful practices. Now they might still be doing well on a level playing field, but the fact is that they have been leveraging their market dominance to ensure that the playing field is not level, and to ensure that competitors are frozen out, unable to compete even when they have a superior product (as in the case of Opteron v pre-Core Xeon). That hurts US as buyers.

Intel playing fair what??? 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 08:41 GMT

Clay do you actually know anything about what Intel is doing?

If Intel is supposedly playing fair then how come Japan has ruled against them?

Intel is a monopoly. Monopolies are legal however Intel is a hostile monopoly and this is what AMD is talking about.

Intel was ahead with or without the technology lead and as far as i can tell the AMD processer is still more efficient.

Why do you thing Intel is in court now? It's trying to twist its way out of breaking the law. They will keep the case going as long as they can in the hopes that AMD will go bust.

Technology vs monopolism 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 08:55 GMT

Looking at the facts, AMD hasn't got a candle to hold to Intel's extensive chipset support. They think it's just a case of people buying processor A versus processor B? Wrong. Many, many people consider the whole picture before buying - and in too many cases, AMD's platform has support and stability issues when compared to Intel's. Then there's socket AM2 - AMD shot itself in the foot when it forced its customers to change platform for an upgrade, when they failed to maintain performance parity with the Core 2 architecture. That's not Intel's fault.

Then we come to processors. When AMD bitches and whines about Intel having quad core that isn't really quad core, Intel is mopping up buyers for whom dual core is not enough. AMD is ... well, still sitting and whining. When they come up with Barcelona (however many months/years that will take), then they can criticise - with performance benchmarks to back up their claims. Until then, they can't blame Intel for being the only game in town.

I think Intel should be punished for breaking laws, but I do not ascribe their success to 100% anti-competitive behaviour. If that were the case, we'd still be stuck with the Prescott...

Re: Ehem. . . Monopoly? 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 09:07 GMT

Yeah, but that doesn't get you headlines or sympathy buys from idiots. Also, it doesn't aid you in winning (probably) spurious court cases.

I am not affiliated with Intel in any way.

Fair play tbh 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 09:20 GMT

They have taken them selfs down to a level that involves filth play and squeeling of little arguments. AMD need to face the fact that they are loosing it, my suggestion would be to pursue there development in the notebook industry, c2d wont be fully needed in notebooks for a while and im sure AMD can come up with a decent line of powerful single core proc's.

Intel have dominated, no question about it, although there quads arnt as popular as they hoped, due to the fact nothing uses them to the full potential and not much of a game for the average user. but in a year when they have spent some time with the technology they have unearthed, its un doubtable they will be the official mainstream proc manufacturer.

fresh

Who decides? 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 11:59 GMT

As far as I am concerned, the consumer has the right to choose what they want, and if more consumers wanted AMD and not Intel, then the shops would be selling AMD - basic rules of supply and demand. Ruiz needs to look at the PC market a bit closer - no change in 10-15 years!! Get real; 15 years ago I paid £1250 for a 486 DX4/100 Compaq desktop that could just about run basic DOS games; my latest Dual Core Intel system that I built myself costing no more than £600 (thanks to Ebuyer.com's great prices) and it has enough power to play games; encode media and fold for World Community Grid all at the same time. AMD need a competitive product that people want, they almost did it with the Athlon64 but you can't argue with Intel R&D as the Core Duo is ace.

Comments! 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 16:24 GMT

So first off, I've got to say that I've heard and seen a number of things that Intel has done to leverage against AMD, but I think AMD has done a reasonable job battling against them up 'til this year.

I've always liked AMD because they've been the underdog, and that forced them to innovate in order to succeed. Their K8 arch was amazing, with dual core ability built in from the start. Keep in mind that when it was released Intel was still claiming that dual core and 64 bit were worthless and that they'd never do that. They changed their minds in a few months.

Intel, with their market lead, can produce nearly anything and keep their lead. That doesn't make for better products.

Whoever mentioned Intel's R&D should read up on the Core products. You know the last new arch that Intel made from scratch? Yeah, that was netburst, and look how well that did. If I do recall the 1.8ghz chips at the initial release were not only slower than the AMD chips that had been on sale for a while, but also had to be recalled for thermal issues.

The Core series is based on the Pentium M series, which is heavily based on the Pentium III, which was just a Pentium II with some added instructions, which was, in itself, just a Pentium Pro with a new shape and new cache.

So Intel's great R&D has come up with... the Pentium Pro. And even with all the features that they advertised for the core chips, they still had to pack 4MB of cache onto them to compare to Opteron speeds. And what, are they the last company on the planet to use an FSB? Hell I think my RPN calculator has moved on to bigger and better things than an FSB.

As to the AM2 socket upgrade, AMD hasn't changed sockets any more often than Intel, who've had 775, then 2 seperate 470 something pin sockets (one for P4, one for Xeon) in the amount of time that AMD has gone through just as many. Plus I think that an on chip memory controller is worth some socket upgrades.

If there's anything that AMD hasn't done right, its get their K10 out in time. If they were shipping those in January or February, Intel would be in rather worse shape than they've ever been. Its really hard to compare the Core series with the K8, which was released about 4 years ago, and I reckon that once K10 is out, we'll see some more of that amazing innovation that AMD does with regularity.

Re: Who decides? 

Posted Friday 22nd June 2007 18:34 GMT

"As far as I am concerned, the consumer has the right to choose what they want..."

Not strictly true. Can a UK consumer legally purchase a copy of Manhunt 2? The simple answer is no because it is not an available option. And that is where your argument falls down, imo.

The consumer has the right to choose BUT only from what is available to them.