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by sdhgaiojfsa
3079 days ago
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I think the big institutional clients are always evaluating AMD, and even more exotic options. But I don't think this bug has materially affected the equation here. Savvy buyers understand that there will occasionally be bugs, and this one has already been mitigated. How Intel verbally responds to the issue matters much less than their actions, because the words do not affect the costs of using their products, and the actions do. I am deeply skeptical of the commentary on Intel's attitude and press releases. I really doubt that matters much to most buyers. |
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First, ARM is doing to Intel what Intel did to the Unix workstation vendors in the 80’s.
Second, given that they’re being cornered into the server business, they need to have products that are rock solid there until they can regroup. This is one of a long parade of recent screwups with their big bets in this space:
(1) A while back, all their server atom chips (tons of crypto and I/O with piles of ECC DRAM and cores for < $1000 and < 20W) had a bug where they stopped booting af 18 months of uptime. These compete exactly in the space server-ARM has a chance, so many affected vendors were already dual sourcing.
(2) NVIDIA crushes them for AI, and Intel is a distant third for graphics in general
(3) Samsung SSDs generally trounce Intel ones.
(4) They’re rapidly losing client device share. Their big recent innovation there is AMT, which is increasingly considered an anti-feature.
That leaves conventional IT compute, (web services, DBMS, etc) for their core business, but even on-prem stuff is moving to private cloud, which needs multi tenancy, and they’re looking pretty risk for that use case too (vs AMD?)
They’ll certainly be around for a long time, but it’s not clear how long they’ll keep their “no one gets fired for buying IBM”-level of dominance.