Intel are dominant at the high end. However, that isn't where the money is any more so AMD have gone in different directions.
The last time they competed with (and beat) Intel it nearly sent them broke, because even though the original FX chips were miles better than the crappy P4s people just wouldn't pay a high price for them because they weren't Intels.
Intel is a home recognised brand name. If you asked an elderly relative if they have heard of Intel they would say yes, of course. Ask them about AMD? I doubt it.
Right now the market is mobile. So phones, tablets, phablets, small form factor PCs. And AMD are doing rather well in that sector. They also completely dominate the lower end of the market because aside from one small toy Intel do not offer anything overclockable at the lower end of the market.
AMD are currently putting their eggs into the APU basket and it's paying dividends. Buying ATI was an incredibly intelligent move, Intel should have done it or pushed for Nvidia. The market now is small low powered CPUs with a half decent GPU on for things like consoles, tablets, phones and so on.
If you're not a part of those markets you're in trouble. Intel are, but, their onboard GPU does not even sniff the ones on the AMD APUs. Intel really need to do something about that IMO, especially when the world is gaming crazy (and I mean tablets and phones etc).
I would hazard a guess and bet that I am one of the few on these forums. I have a Blackberry Q10 and use it for the communications side of things, rather than playing games. In fact I have not installed a single game on mine.
The last time they competed with (and beat) Intel it nearly sent them broke, because even though the original FX chips were miles better than the crappy P4s people just wouldn't pay a high price for them because they weren't Intels.
Intel is a home recognised brand name. If you asked an elderly relative if they have heard of Intel they would say yes, of course. Ask them about AMD? I doubt it.
Right now the market is mobile. So phones, tablets, phablets, small form factor PCs. And AMD are doing rather well in that sector. They also completely dominate the lower end of the market because aside from one small toy Intel do not offer anything overclockable at the lower end of the market.
AMD are currently putting their eggs into the APU basket and it's paying dividends. Buying ATI was an incredibly intelligent move, Intel should have done it or pushed for Nvidia. The market now is small low powered CPUs with a half decent GPU on for things like consoles, tablets, phones and so on.
If you're not a part of those markets you're in trouble. Intel are, but, their onboard GPU does not even sniff the ones on the AMD APUs. Intel really need to do something about that IMO, especially when the world is gaming crazy (and I mean tablets and phones etc).
I would hazard a guess and bet that I am one of the few on these forums. I have a Blackberry Q10 and use it for the communications side of things, rather than playing games. In fact I have not installed a single game on mine.