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Intel has a Pretty Big Problem..

Yeah discrete Intel GPUs are gone for the foreseeable future, although BMG iGPU on Arrow Lake does look quite good. Intel is not doing well on the high end but it’s competing very well on the low end/integrated side.

I don’t think they have. Intels work on its One API has been impressive and its hardware has some nice features. I really like the direction Intel are heading and cards like the flex series are becoming standout parts.
 
I don’t think they have. Intels work on its One API has been impressive and its hardware has some nice features. I really like the direction Intel are heading and cards like the flex series are becoming standout parts.
Talking about consumer cards. I think there will be still high end workstation cards and solutions for DC/AI.
 
Talking about consumer cards. I think there will be still high end workstation cards and solutions for DC/AI.

But that’s where the money comes from and what drives the market. Gaming graphics cards (particularly Nvidia) is just an outlet for the be lower quality binned silicon that can’t sold elsewhere. There are no consumer GPUs designs any longer.
 
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Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger are really very worry about upcoming Battlemage discrete graphic cards because very few people will buy it than both Intel desktop and mobile CPUs. If it will still have 1% AIB marketshare in 2025 then I think he will cancel all future discrete graphic cards developments.
whats the exact quote with context? rather than some dumb sound bite? this is considered quality journalism these days? having to dissect a quote and only allow the reader to see those parts the author wishes?

There's no way he walked on stage or whatever and then said " Gelsinger sees "less need for discrete graphics in the market going forward"." and left is there.....
what time scale is his vision on? or what is the vision?

what graphics market is he talking about? business? home users? the whole article is dross quality garbage in garbage out, might as well be AI written.

probably was AI , scraped a few websites, found some random quote and made a story
 
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just need a decent gamers cpu upgrade lol
they don't even have 30% market share yet though, but the stocks are priced like AMD has 70% and intel has 30%

it's taken about 24 years for amd to gain 5-10%, considering the state of intel cpus right now you'd think amd would be more near 40-50% desktop
 
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they don't even have 30% market share yet though, but the stocks are priced like AMD has 70% and intel has 30%

it's taken about 24 years for amd to gain 5-10%, considering the state of intel cpus right now you'd think amd would be more near 40-50% desktop
They had to fight some pretty nasty monopolistic & anti competitive practices for a decade or so. For a certain era of user, CTO, ICT purchasing manager or whatever I'm pretty sure they still have this strong association of office/desktop CPU == Intel
 
they don't even have 30% market share yet though, but the stocks are priced like AMD has 70% and intel has 30%

it's taken about 24 years for amd to gain 5-10%, considering the state of intel cpus right now you'd think amd would be more near 40-50% desktop
well AMD got 30% and making money. Intel have the sales (for now) but where is the profit LOL

scroll down to thier financial statement :eek:

:eek:
 
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I'm pretty sure they still have this strong association of office/desktop CPU == Intel
yea but where did that reputation come from?

it came from Intel having fast and reliable CPU's

Didn't AMD CPUs back then have some kind of stone tile on them that could crack when you put the heatsink on?

old link for refference of AMDs reputation for chips that easily crack or get crushed
 
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yea but where did that reputation come from?

it came from Intel having fast and reliable CPU's

Didn't AMD CPUs back then have some kind of stone tile on them that could crack when you put the heatsink on?
Intel got there through their 'strong arm' tactics and dodgy business practices.

free CPU's for Dell etc. paying $200m a month to cripple AMD. Fast and reiiable my ar*e.
 
Intel got there through their 'strong arm' tactics and dodgy business practices.

free CPU's for Dell etc. paying $200m a month to cripple AMD. Fast and reiiable my ar*e.
whether you know that or not, I am old enough to have experienced their bullying sales tactics first hand. In my book not much has changed except they haven't the money to do the same again yet they can still flex their (payed for) influence!
 
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