Brian_B
FPS Enthusiast
- Joined
- May 28, 2019
- Messages
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- 113
They already doubled production in the last 3 years orso and still can't keep up with demand how are they supposed to take on even more production?
Hmm...
Well, the PC market had been in long decline - largely due to new work at home and school at home, it finally had a positive growth year last year, growing about 10%.
Enterprise/Server market has grown, but not consitently over the past 3 years. According to Gartner and IDC, 2018 was 32%, 2019 was only about 7%, 2020 was back up to around 20%. But all were positive.
So that's the total possible sales. It isn't quite double, but not too far off - maybe 70% total growth in the market spaces... so I can't really dispute "Doubled production in the last 3 years" - as the market almost follows that.
I'm not even factoring in AMD. I know they are outselling Intel in some markets now, but over the past 3 years, it probably isn't hugely consequential, so I'll just conveniently ignore that as a rounding error and say that yeah, @Denpepe has a decent point about production.
That said, I don't think Intel's biggest issues are production. They are having culture issues keeping talented staff around - that's big. They've had a lot of turnover at high profile positions, that creates a lot of stress on the organization. And they've been stuck on 14nm and Skylake derivatives for... a long time now. So you have stagnation at the innovation level. And there's been a large lack of focus: Intel has long been trying to diversify away from x86, they just can't seem to hit anything else in stride. x86 (between Client and Enterprise) represents the vast majority of Intel's revenue, and they've tried everything from mobile to storage to anti virus to Internet of Things to graphics to drones to ... they are clearly just throwing everything at the wall to see if anything sticks, and so far none of it has
None of those issues are isolated in a vacuum - I think all of them are interrelated in some way. Just a mess that will take a while to unwind, no single silver bullet to fix all those problems. Honestly, I think Intel is headed the same way IBM is -- they won't ever die because they have too much invested into patents, but they will wither into mostly insignificance in everyday culture. If they ever start selling off patents - that's when you know they are getting spun off into dissolution.