Hardware

Intel acknowledges that it is losing market share in processors to AMD

Finally, Intel has been able to recognize that AMD is managing to cut market share, although it has been difficult for them to recognize it.

I think Intel should stop using Internet Explorer. The arrival of the AMD Ryzen 3000 processors is affecting them and the Ryzen have affected them. That is something evident and undeniable and that is not exactly a secret. Well, it seems that the company has just realized this fact. At least, this is interpreted from the words of Jason Grebe, Corporate Vice President, General Manager of Cloud Platforms and Technology Group at Intel.

Grebe highlights that it is clear that they have lost market share with the arrival of AMD Ryzen processors. He also spoke of the challenges they will have to face to continue dominating the market. It emphasizes that they not only want to maintain their dominance in the processor marketYes, they are going for the graphics card market and Artificial Intelligence.

Intel just realized that it has lost market share due to AMD Ryzen

The Zen2 @ 7nm architecture has caused a lot of problems for Intel. EPYC Rome processors are here to rob you of a huge market share in processors. We don't know anything about Threadripper processors yet.

“In general, if there is a sale of a CPU on the planet, we want to be part of it. Therefore, we do not look at any segment of the market and say, well, we are going to move away from that segment or what does not interest us from there. We want to compete aggressively in all segments.

As we went through the problem of processor supply of the last 6 to 12 months, we had to move away from some markets, such as low-end notebooks, as well as some affordable desktop processors. But as we continue to improve our supply situation, we will continue to become more aggressive there. "

Competing with NVIDIA in artificial intelligence will not be easy

An analyst has also asked him about Intel's plans to compete with NVIDIA in the AI ​​market. Specifically if they are working to regain market share and if they are developing a solution that allows them to compete.

"Yes. Of course. So our strategy on AI is pretty straightforward. We are going to start with our Xeon processor, which is our main product line. We are going to build custom ASICs for training and inference to compete directly against our competition. Eventually we are getting into the GPU business. And we are going to have a complete portfolio of products that could serve any AI that is required. And again, from a workload perspective, we are extremely optimistic about AI. We believe that more than 70% of workloads in the coming years will have some form of AI.

And our strategy at Intel is to have AI in all of our silicon products from Data Centers to our Movidius product lines. Therefore, we are extremely optimistic about our ability to compete here and regain market share. "

Source: wccftech

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Robert Sole

Director of Contents and Writing of this same website, technician in renewable energy generation systems and low voltage electrical technician. I work in front of a PC, in my free time I am in front of a PC and when I leave the house I am glued to the screen of my smartphone. Every morning when I wake up I walk across the Stargate to make some coffee and start watching YouTube videos. I once saw a dragon ... or was it a Dragonite?

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