FuryRosewood
Active Member
It as was said earlier, would be Netburst vs 64 all over again. Price for AMD chips would rise due to demand, and price of Intel would drop, would not change anything, just would change who was more expensive...
Intel hasn't set the architecture for the mobile market though and is really losing out massively on smart phones and tablets to the ARM based processors and with that market growing faster than any other at the moment, if Intel don't change quickly they won't have anything left to give for the likes of you and me, they will only provide to servers that are running your phones and tablets
Now if AMD had simply continued its reign since then, after another few years the status quo would have changed, possibly even flip-flopped. AMD would have slowly snowballed into being a true powerhouse, and who knows what would have happened. With this scenario, Intel's incredible profit lead over AMD would no longer be valid, as it would be an unknown. AMD could be the clear #1 processor company in the world, taking the spot that Intel used to hold years ago. AMD and Intel could be incredibly competitive and running consistently neck-and-neck. Or AMD could be much better off than they are now, but due to superior PR (as a whole) by Intel, or PR blunders (or lack of effort in this area) by AMD...Intel might still have a healthy overall advantage over AMD.
The real question i had in mind was where competition was high, what innovations might we see?
I disagree with this as well, at least in part. I don't see desktops going anywhere soon, and ARM and the other mobile processors are a lifetime away from even coming close to competing with AMD (let alone Intel) in this area.
I do see Intel as very likely losing out on the mobile market, with maybe an eventual clear winner (along with a mobile-AMD type in 2nd) for both tablets and phones. In the not-so-distant future, I could easily see one gadget replacing both the tablet and phone in this scenario. Then you would have X company(s) as the leader of the mobile market and presumably still Intel as the leader of the desktop (as well as server) market.
Everyone keeps saying mobile technology is the future as if everything is going to boil down to that, save perhaps more traditional-like servers for the heavy lifting. I disagree. I don't see tablets and the mobile computing sector as a fad like some do, but there is no way in hell it's going to replace desktops. Not in a million years. Hell, even if some mobile cpu manufacturer came up with an ultimate chip that was vastly superior to any desktop chip, desktops wouldn't be going anywhere. The screen-size ALONE would guarantee this, among other factors. The mobile market is a viable market and rapidly growing (as does all similar newer technologies), but it will eventually slow down and level off. At best, it will be a second primary computing device. At worst...it will probably be a second primary computing device.
The desktop has absolutely nothing to fear from mobile devices, regardless of how many 15 yr old girls scream with joy about their new phone or tablet, how many insecure sheep just have to have one because everyone else does, or the sheer amount of advertising being crammed down our throats. That statement isn't exactly fair to say and there definitely is a place and benefits for/from using mobile devices. But they are far from the be-all and end-all of the future of computing.
Sorry about the rant. I got sidetracked.
The real question i had in mind was where competition was high, what innovations might we see?
R&D and owange. That's what happened with Sandy Bridge vs. FX Series. If it happened then, it'll happen again. Maybe AMD with release 16 cores next to get even or something.