Article:
"AMD Sees Steady Growth in All Computing Segments"
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=5358
There seems to have been a lot of talk in the forums about AMD tanking lately, now that their architecture is the older one on the market. It seems their sales haven't been hit at all, though. I don't think any talk of AMD having difficulty riding out the current "crisis" has merit given the sales record over the last two years.
Now that they're beginning to transition to 65nm, they can finally start to come closer to meeting the demand for their product, so they will probably manage to get sales increases again over the next year. I would hold on to stock if I owned any.
I think the market numbers show that brand recognition counts for a lot. Even though I would certainly choose the C2D over the X2 if I were spending more than $200 on a processor, in the non-computer-geek world AMD is finally as recognised as Intel.
"AMD Sees Steady Growth in All Computing Segments"
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=5358
There seems to have been a lot of talk in the forums about AMD tanking lately, now that their architecture is the older one on the market. It seems their sales haven't been hit at all, though. I don't think any talk of AMD having difficulty riding out the current "crisis" has merit given the sales record over the last two years.
Now that they're beginning to transition to 65nm, they can finally start to come closer to meeting the demand for their product, so they will probably manage to get sales increases again over the next year. I would hold on to stock if I owned any.
I think the market numbers show that brand recognition counts for a lot. Even though I would certainly choose the C2D over the X2 if I were spending more than $200 on a processor, in the non-computer-geek world AMD is finally as recognised as Intel.