http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-10433953-64.html
oh man .. ditch the stock!
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http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-10433953-64.html
oh man .. ditch the stock!
lol fail... (the exec..)
amd are awesome for cheaper builds
/facepalm
....and this was a comment made SIX YEARS AGO.
Hardly relevant, IMO.
The quote is from 2004... which means he'd take a P4 over an athlon 64? fail
its very possible that quote was taken out of context. it could have been the sales exec getting mad at an engineer complaining that he cant sell them at the price he wanted too. to never want to use them in his own system, that parts funny cause so many complain that intel chips feel sluggish in windows
Well, being 6 years old does make it less bad. But that's still horrible PR regardless, and a very stupid comment for an Exec to make
AMD has enough problems with sales as it is, they really don't need Henri running his dumb mouth, telling people with zero computer background that Intel is the only way to go
A lot has changed, it's not really relevant anymore.
Don't fall for Intel's PR...
You have to admit, whether it was 4 years ago or six years ago. AMD had a more competitive line up then, compared to what it has now.
I was ROFL when I saw the title
Though, it would make much sense if it was said between 2006 and 2009. In 2004 AMD was not only competitive, it was actually better than Intel.
Never is a bad word, but as for today, it's a good decision.
lol
There are so many things wrong with that article it's not even funny. Epic Fail :down:
hehehe sounds like PR desperation hehehe
First of all it was cited at the time AMD was dominating intel(facepalm number 1) ;second of all AMD is competitive today in all the segments except the high end (both server and desktop;high end is hardly relevant profit wise)-facepalm no 2.
So all in all, fail article and facepalm granted from me(after 6 years).
Read the story; it's an internal memo. This has nothing to do with PR.
Convoluted style and shallow research makes my ass burn.
Hope you all read the entire article. There is lot more interesting things talked about then just what the topic of the thread says. And also for those saying its irrelevant because its old, Hellloooooo. THats the point. If it was said today it would have no counter-point or bearing on Intel's defense. Intel is bringing up this quote to undermine AMD's case. "AMD has accused Intel of essentially blocking PC makers from buying its chips by using alleged anticompetitive business practices. (AMD has claimed that PC makers would rather buy its chips but were pressured not to.)" And Intel was accused of these crimes during the same time when this statement by the AMD exec was made. Do I need to connect the dots for you all? If AMD is trying to accuse Intel of blocking PC makers from buying its chips it doesn't look good when AMD's own exec said HE wouldn't even buy them, making the AMD accusations look less credible.
A -> B -> C Reading comprehension. Most of you failed to see the point of the article. But keep on facepalming and calling the quote old,:ROTF:
Intel is good at two things :
1.crashing their opponents by blocking their to get supply from other suppliers
2.marketing
So are you saying they are not good at making processors?
If I was the exec who said that six years ago, I would definitely agree with the facepalm. However in todays chip market, if I was a business exec, I would agree, that its better to use Intel chips because they offer way better performance per watt. And as an overclocker, they kill AMD on anything that is not ln2 or liquid helium.
Additionally, they are only competitive when their quadcores or tricores are taking on Intels dual-cores or last generation processors(at significantly higher speed to do it to in this case). The thing is, AMD fastest chips cost just as much to make as Intel fastest if not more.
Xbitlabs was saying that the phenom II x2 cores are just as large in die size as the core i7.
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu...n-ii-x2_3.html
They are only competitive using brute force(large die size or extra cores) and taking small margins which cause the company to lose money. This mean they are far behind techwise and this type of business model is not sustainable. This they are not truly competitive.
If Intel started to price their chips like AMD and follow the same business model, they would take out AMD in a year. Their current pricing plan is a more of making due with what they have, rather than something to due with how fast their chips are.
thats not true at all for the die cashe takes the same space so the logic part is rather small on both and amds l3 less parts are much smaller and a quad amd with no l3 is about the same as a dual core intel size wise. amd has better platforms than intel dose but intel has better cpus (although when u dont oc they are about the same), they have igps that are way ahead of intel, and for normal consumer use with booting windows, browsing the internet, casual games and video amd is better. but back in 04 intel had junk with the p4 and even with the 1st 775 parts latter. but then if he was to get a prebuilt im not sure were u could get a good system with an amd cpu
amd is better than intel for most high end servers, once u are in a dull x64 environment or using visualization amd really pulls ahead, especially when u can buy 8 amd cpus for the price of 4 intel and they will have the same power draw. intel is only better if u need brute force int work in 32bit and thats not all to common.
lol, amd and ftc sell intel, and this is how intel responds? :rolleyes:
digging up some 6 year old statement about how amd cpus werent competitive enough back then? pff... please... :rolleyes:
so what, intel execs always thought their chips were the best to get at all times? prescott? willamette? the crash and burn pentium 3 1ghz edition? the crash and meltdown 840XE dualcore? :p:
please... what a lame low blow...
lol is you were a biz exec, you would care about performance and price....for businesses both are sufficient. this will not help them anyway with their case, the opinion of the marketing (former?) head at the time is not relevant to their case.
it would be like if I went out for a drink with a midget, and I then asked the midget how they can drink so much alcohol; when they have such small bodies..... it's pointless and has no bearing on the conversation/issue at hand.
AMD and Intel have already settled this matter. Just water under the bridge.
just because the intel has made amends with their rival; does not mean that the repercussions of their actions have simply vanished. this is about more than amd; or nvidia, it has to do with Intel abusing their dominate position to lock out competitors,and keeps prices inflated. look me in the eye and tell me that if amd had never been their to challenge intel; prices would have dropped and performance would have increased as much as they have.
Pretty much an open and shut case. :hammer: Nice work by the Intel legal team. There's a reason why they get paid those big bucks. :bananal:
XbitlabsQuote:
“We were going to not be as competitive in the mobile space, even though we knew that mobile space was going to be critical. [AMD] was late with a competitive product in the mobile space,” Mr. Ruiz is reported to have said.
Interesting that even though they realised it they still tried to sell K8 until recently, a good strategy ignoring 2/3rd of the market.
Good job Exec, now the marketing department will be pissed.
i really think his statement wasn't meant to be taken literally. even though amd's a64 wiped the floor with intel's p4 back then, intel sold more p4 than amd its a64 - because most large oems just offered pcs with intel's p4.... that's what the recent anti-trust case between amd and intel was about. and here is, imo, the point where this statement might fit: "imagine you're a casual pc user that has no clue about performance figures and the like and you go to a store or oem-website and everywhere you look there's always a huge p4-advertising catching your eyes. almost every pc features a p4, oem pcs with a64 are scarce articles. NOW what would you buy? under these circumstances 'i wouldn't buy amd either'".
i think you get the idea ;)
It wasn't PR :up:Thank you :clap:Quote:
internal AMD communication from former Executive Vice President ....
The entire context is likely missing... He was stating that AMD needed their own chipsets and such, and by the looks of it suggesting they needed better marketing which was true in 04'. Noobs still praise the p4 though much less now.
Is this any difference than what has been trotted out as truth that Intel was engaging in anti-competitive practices? It all comes down to the details. We won't get those until the courts start seeing this case.
totally agree :toast:
it took amd too long to become competitive? as if they were competitive right now... only by lowering their prices massively are they able to sell mobile parts... thats not what id call competitive...
and the mobile market is important because its the future...
Exactly. I think the point he was trying to make is "If I didn't work at AMD, I wouldn't have known it's just as good or better, and I would have went with the familiar and common Intel instead".
And what mr Ruiz is saying is that they could have been better off with delivering a complete platform rather than just the processors - from their (AMD's) business perspective. Not from a performance or cost perspective to the end costumer.
i don't get all your facepalm comments---
it's an internal memo and i bet that they weren't talking about desktop chips
read the hector ruiz quote above; i'm 100% sure that this talk was about mobile chips which simply sucked back then (desktop chip stuck into a mobile system; propably athlon XP) and it could be a complaint from exec to R&D regarding the lack of competitive mobile chips from amd....
from the article:
so is this the reason why we now have some killer platforms from AMD? the 790 and 890s are great for almost everything, and cost next to nothing.Quote:
According to Intel AMD’s marketing chief called AMD “pathetic” for “selling processors rather than platforms
well resources were not available because they could not sell units (didn't they try to give away a million units...and no one would take them?),without income or access to the market, amd could not develop a good mobile platform. yes they did not have there own chipsets, but that is only part of the problem. the way that intel shut them out, even if they did have the whole platform, they would not have been able to come to market anyways.
it really is open and shut, either intel will settle (give in) to ftc demands, or they will lose the case. if anyone becomes surprised that these events happen...they are seriously deluded.
:shakes:
Umm....
I don't know how to put this...but...of course I know he didn't say that directly to the media as a PR move. However with the context intel has put it in, for the average clueless user, yes it is terrible PR. Making negative comments about your company is never something you say on the record.
It fails because what Intel did was wrong regardless of the competition and if AMD was truly that bad why were they trying to stifle competition? If they would actually use this as a defense they will be laughed out of court it would seem. Am I missing something?
As was said many times before, it is cutted out of context. I'd say the way he meant it was like he would never buy AMD because would be convinced by PR/media massage that Intel is the only way. But as long as he worked for AMD, he knew AMD (K8 at those times) was signifficantly better.
Anyone read the actual document?
What's up with the black lines,I thought Intel can do full HD now :rofl::p:
A 64 was launched in September of 2003,the document says Athlon - as in
Athlon xp,not athlon 64.
I see "In 2004, AMD Executive Vice President Henry Richard, the company's highest ranking sales executive, declared internally..." there, you don't?
So 2004 - Athlon 64. In the era of K7, there were cycles when one company had higher freq and other had higher freq thus one or other was better, but K7 was not really bad either.