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HW News - RTX 3000 Dates, AMD x86 Market Growth, Major Intel Leaks - GamersNexus

HW News - RTX 3000 Dates, AMD x86 Market Growth, Major Intel Leaks - GamersNexus

HW News - RTX 3000 Dates, AMD x86 Market Growth, Major Intel Leaks - GamersNexus
Aug 08, 2020 3 mins, 20 secs

We followed-up with some board partners and learned that at least a few of them are still ordering RTX 2070 Super GPUs from NVIDIA, and that their models are still getting manufactured.

It probably will be soon, but the rumor is incorrect and partners are still buying GPUs from NVIDIA.

Mindfactory is one of the more prominent German retailers serving the market, and the retailer regularly makes data available regarding its business.

Mindfactory recently published its RMA rates for NVIDIA and AMD GPUs.

While this data only represents a glimpse into the overall market, and should in no way be taken as conclusive, it’s usually interesting nonetheless, as these data sets often highlight certain patterns.

Overall, Mindfactory is reporting the RMA numbers for what appears to be a total of 172,650 GPUs; 50,440 belonging to AMD, and the remaining 122,210 being Nvidia’s.

Earlier reports indicated 40,000 units and 76,000 units, which was accurate to the numbers provided at the time, but is no longer accurate.

According to the data, as of time of writing, Mindfactory saw a total of 3016 RMAs for Nvidia and 1625 for AMD.

The data encompasses most of each company’s current product stack, with data representing the GTX 1660 Ti at the bottom of the stack for Nvidia, and going all the way up to the RTX 2080 Ti.

Mindfactory’s data also has numbers for specific AIB models and partners as well, although not all RMA quotes from all models and vendors were available.    .

Early reports have suggested that Samsung was only interested in acquiring a minority stake -- something to the tune of 3 to 5 percent, according to an anonymous industry official (via Korean Times).

The hits just keep coming for Intel, it seems.

Intel is still dealing with the fallout coming off the heels of its 7nm delay, and now, it has to contend with what looks like a major IP leak.

Furthermore, Kottman claims this is the first of many Intel leaks to come. .

This would be indicative of a partner leak, which GN has received from partners covertly in the past -- most recently, it was from AMD’s similar resource center.

AMD’s upward ascension continues, as the company is riding historic highs regarding its market capitalization, stock price, and x86 market share. .

On August 5, AMD’s share price peaked at $85.31, and broke the $100B market cap barrier for the first time.

However, at time of writing, AMD’s stock has tumbled down a bit to $83.26, with a market cap of ~$98B.

Separately, AMD has also notched its highest x86 market share since 2013, as new market share data has been published by Mercury Research.

AMD has also secured its highest ever notebook market share, and continues to claw away server market share from Intel. .

For the numbers themselves, Mercury research reports that AMD has captured 18.3% of the overall x86 market.

Moving onto notebooks, AMD is seeing record market share, with a reported share of 19.9%, a 5.8 point gain yearly.

When it comes to servers, AMD CEO Lisa Su recently said the company finally achieved double-digit share, but stopped just short of citing any numbers.

AMD bases its server share numbers off of IDC’s research, which reports only on 1P and 2P server market share.

Mercury Research reports not only on 1P and 2P, but 4P and 8P configured x86 servers as well.

As such, there’s some discrepancy between AMD’s claims and Mercury’s numbers.

Mercury Research reports that AMD has captured 5.8% of the x86 server market.

She also led the way into research into parallel processing, which would become the basis for GPUs and supercomputers, among other things

Finally, Pidnoel also criticized Intel for wasting die and core space on its Xeon line, saying Intel should specialize its Xeons for niche applications, rather than selling chips that waste as much as 10% of the chip space

The former Intel engineer also touched on Intel losing focus on its core CPU business and issues with Intel’s hyperthreading performance compared to Ryzen

Summarized by 365NEWSX ROBOTS

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