AMD End Intel Server CPU Market is unique, and the dual market accounts for no difference

According to Wccftech, the AMD server CPU market has made significant progress, and the PassMark server CPU market share data is on par with long-term rival Intel, reaching a staggering 50%. Representing the AMD Data Center CPU, it won a certain sha...


According to Wccftech, the AMD server CPU market has made significant progress, and the PassMark server CPU market share data is on par with long-term rival Intel, reaching a staggering 50%. Representing the AMD Data Center CPU, it won a certain share and finally Intel's dominant position for decades.

A few years ago in 2017, AMD server CPUs accounted for only about 2% because there was no competitive product launch yet. But in just a few years, AMD's market share has risen to 50%, greatly improving the high competitiveness of EPYC server CPU product lines.

AMD EPYC series products, especially the EPYC Naples series introduced into Zen architecture, successfully attracting customers. This data center CPU has strong growth trends, mainly from AMD's executive executive Su Zifeng's promises and the backwardness of rivals. AMD's cooperation with NTU has also led to better products.

In sharp contrast to AMD's upward trend, Intel has been sluggish in the past few quarters, as leadership changes and product development failed to meet market expectations. Although Intel's Xeon platform architecture has made a lot of progress, customers are increasingly oriented towards AMD processors because Intel's processes have been lagging behind.

Intel's artificial intelligence (AI) field performance was not ideal, failed to grasp the market trend, and the Gaudi series failed to defeat its competitors. Intel executive director Chen Liwu admitted that the industry standards have fallen sharply and have not even entered the top ten semi-conductor companies. AMD seized Intel's time to back off and counterattacked in the server CPU field.



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