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On Ethernet, Intel is known for their little frills, stable line of NICs. That said, they have not been a leader since the jump to 10Gbps. Their 10Gbps line eventually came along and is solid, but it was a few years behind everyone else. That same story seems to be repeating itself at every new ethernet standard over the past decade. Come to think of it, the last decade has been really bad for Intel. They no longer have a node advantage. They no longer have a performance advantage in any market space that I can think of outside of frequency hungry low-thread applications (games). Their WiFi chips are good, but second tier.
Their Modem chips are third tier.
Their node is mostly on par with the competition, for now.
Their CPUs are trading blows with AMD.
Their ethernet chips are a generation behind.
Optane is is a bright spot, but we'll see how they squander that. The next big diversification play by Intel is GPUs, I have no idea how that will pan out. |
Optane is a neat idea, but the severe change in software architecture combined with only select CPUs even supporting it will limit uptake outside FAANGs or organizations with really specialized needs.