Let's see...now AMD would have us believe that Intel has extracted huge monopoly rents, but their cries to the EU were that Intel was pricing below cost?!?! Brilliant how those Intel people have managed to earn huge profits by selling below cost. AMD needs that kind of magic themselves!
Anonymous Coward
At least they acknowledged they have a primary competitor #
are all Intel's fault. Of course they are. Not. Intel are not to blame for the poor supply chain of AMD. Have you ever tried to actually buy a high-end AMD cpu? "Should be in soon, maybe 12 weeks". Whereas ask for an Intel chip, the reply is usually "how many do you want sir?"
AMD have never actually designed a decent chip anyway. Going back to the 486 days, they were a copy of the Intel chip. The K5 was crap. The K6 was designed by Nextgen. The K7 on were co-designed by DEC.
When AMD can design a good chip, AND supply them in quantity, AND supply them on-time AND at a good price, then they will be serious competition. These law suits are purely AMD clutching at straws, trying to find someone to blame for their own shortcomings. Get your own house in order and you will be competitive.
AMD was growing in market share, and was on the verge of breaking through, but lost out due to poor execution. Get back to work, and make better products!
"We are confident that the microprocessor market segment is functioning normally and that Intel's conduct has been lawful, pro-competitive, and beneficial to consumers," said Intel veep Bruce Sewell.
How can that statement be true, whenever, especially so in the microprocessor market segment, pro-competition can only really mean exclusion?
Unless microprocessor market segments functioning normally, function differently from traditional markets?
Intel doesn't have the monopoly power to set the price of it's CPU's above the market level, because it does competition, and the products are more or less undifferentiated, as far as most consumers are concerned.
Intel wins at Monopoly, grabs $60bn unfairly - says...
Anonymous Coward
Brilliant, Intel #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 00:01 GMT
Let's see...now AMD would have us believe that Intel has extracted huge monopoly rents, but their cries to the EU were that Intel was pricing below cost?!?! Brilliant how those Intel people have managed to earn huge profits by selling below cost. AMD needs that kind of magic themselves!
Anonymous Coward
At least they acknowledged they have a primary competitor #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 00:12 GMT
But did they mean AMD or VIA ?
Matthew Sinclair
this can be summed up #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 03:32 GMT
"Says the pot calling the kettle black"
Seriously... someone tell those people at AMD to shut up and get their diapers changed.
They sound just as bad as Microshaft accusing ________ of monopoly or patent violation.
pondscum
So AMD's problems... #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 03:32 GMT
are all Intel's fault. Of course they are. Not. Intel are not to blame for the poor supply chain of AMD. Have you ever tried to actually buy a high-end AMD cpu? "Should be in soon, maybe 12 weeks". Whereas ask for an Intel chip, the reply is usually "how many do you want sir?"
AMD have never actually designed a decent chip anyway. Going back to the 486 days, they were a copy of the Intel chip. The K5 was crap. The K6 was designed by Nextgen. The K7 on were co-designed by DEC.
When AMD can design a good chip, AND supply them in quantity, AND supply them on-time AND at a good price, then they will be serious competition. These law suits are purely AMD clutching at straws, trying to find someone to blame for their own shortcomings. Get your own house in order and you will be competitive.
Craig Cruden
AMD blew it! #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 03:32 GMT
AMD was growing in market share, and was on the verge of breaking through, but lost out due to poor execution. Get back to work, and make better products!
amanfromMars
Hmmm? Skewed Intel... #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 10:22 GMT
"We are confident that the microprocessor market segment is functioning normally and that Intel's conduct has been lawful, pro-competitive, and beneficial to consumers," said Intel veep Bruce Sewell.
How can that statement be true, whenever, especially so in the microprocessor market segment, pro-competition can only really mean exclusion?
Unless microprocessor market segments functioning normally, function differently from traditional markets?
Stuart
Intel isn't a monopoly #
Posted Friday 3rd August 2007 17:10 GMT
Intel doesn't have the monopoly power to set the price of it's CPU's above the market level, because it does competition, and the products are more or less undifferentiated, as far as most consumers are concerned.
Alan Donaly
pricing #
Posted Monday 6th August 2007 02:20 GMT
Intel only dumps some of their line low to
mid products the high end is still incredibly
high and won't really come down stack that
up against AMD who keep all their prices
high and never lower them take too long to
deliver chips and you can see why Intel
wins, the shear ability to shit out chips
that at least kind of work in almost no
time should not be discounted I don't
see this as a monopoly game it's true
if your big it helps but they don't have
to do anything underhanded to sell chips.