Folks, we are forgetting one important thing, well, maybe two.
First, you can save a hundred million dollars by switching from Intel to AMD - 700 million loss by Intel is more than the 600 million gain from AMD, so you are saving 14.5% or only paying 85.5% of Intel's asking price for something better . And this without confusing your American audience with replacing a comma as a separator with a decimal as done in Europe with the metric system. No, I do not know pricing for either company, yet it would be nice to see things reported in units sold or shipped, not just the dollar losses, so I am only going with what I have in front of me, and making assumptions such as everything else is equal, which clearly is not the case - Intel charges more for less, etc., see the second reason below.
Second, you get better everything - power, performance, cores, a newer x86 architect, etc. by switching to/going with AMD
Competition is good for most everyone, except the person or company loosing that is not able to recover. I do not think that Intel is such a small company that they can not recover in the server, HEDT (High End Desk Top), and HPC (High Performance Computer) markets - they have clearly recovered in the consumer market. Ten plus years ago AMD had stumbled, and in a big way. Now we see competition on the x86 CPU and the GPU (both integrated and discrete) chip fronts thanks to AMD willing to take the hard lessons learned and fight back.
So, we now have the following, in the x86 world of things:
- AMD with Zen and RDNA
- Intel with iCore and Xe
- Nvidia with RTX, with possibly ARM in the non-x86 CPU market
To quote Joe Walsh from a song of his - "Life has been good to me so far"