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by dangus
556 days ago
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Intel has actually had many quarters of declining revenue, Google has been far more consistent in the last 15 years. Intel has had over 20 quarters where revenue declined since 2010 and they are spread out across 2010-2024, while Google only lost revenue in two quarters. I would argue that Intel's poor performance is quite detached from Google's consistently exceptional performance. Heck, they aren't even in the same business (primarily hardware vs. primarily media (advertising) and software). Google is: - A member of the smartphone app store duopoly - A member of the cloud compute big 3 - Nearly a pure monopoly in Internet search in Western countries - Has a higher office productivity software marketshare than Microsoft Office - Internet cable TV provider with the highest subscriber count I'd like to understand how it "hasn't been that amazing recently." |
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Intel has been around since 1968 and Google since 1998. As you say they're also in a different business. But Intel has executed pretty well up to maybe 2007 so over about 50 years. vs. Google's 26 years of existence.
Most of your bullet points aren't anything new, this is Google riding on work that's been done a while back. The question is what will be the new bullet points and whether it will be able to stave competition eating into its existing bullet points. The pressure to get the stock price higher is going to take its toll as the bean counters try to artificially inflate it.