So the Internet was blowing a fuse over Mr. Killebrew leaving AMD, but it seems to be quite chilled out about Eric not being there anymore? Boy, the Internet sure knows its stuff!
This situation is different - really surprising. It's hard to tell anything unless we know Eric's reasons...
Ask Read and he'll tell you that's a key advantage for AMD, that its CPU and GPU IP will bring more value through a better overall experience in the market. That's a strategy less obsessed with raw specs and sheer speed and more focused on a holistic package. Senior VP Lisa Su said AMD will aggressively enter the tablet arena this year in a big way, reiterating that AMD-based Windows 8 slates are indeed en route, though she stopped short of giving an ETA. Finally, the company's renewing its focus in the server market, as it seeks to cut a larger slice of the cloud computing pie.
Read the reports from the analyst day, especially Lisa Su's comments with regards to graphics.
Chillblast has confirmed it currently has “zero availability” of Fusion chips, with no confirmed date for new stock. In fact, since Llano’s June launch, Chillblast has been able to secure precisely two of these chips, and Sawyer said one supplier he uses had managed to source only ten of these sought-after processors.
A spokesman for another major British firm told us off-the-record it’s had issues with both Fusion and Bulldozer, saying “we’d struggle to make a high-end gaming system” because of a lack of availability.
Perhaps the biggest threat to AMD comes from British chip designer ARM. It already has the lion’s share of the smartphone and tablet processor market; now it’s expanding into PC territory too.
Not only is Microsoft adding support for ARM into Windows 8, but the ARM-based Tegra 3 is targeting laptops. ARM’s executive vice president of marketing, Lance Howarth, has said that by 2020 “there’s only going to be two [chip designers] – ourselves and Intel”.
Morales echoes this sentiment, saying he expects AMD to become “a shell of a company” in the near future, as “tablets and smartphones move extremely fast and hardware companies can’t keep up”.
In fact, Su described graphics as one of AMD's "crown jewels" that ends up being the "centerpiece of our roadmap."
So you/Su are saying that the future is practically all APU which is not a future that would include Eric Demers?
But the world moves on. I can only hope it wasn't due to Eric thinking AMD were headed down the wrong path with regards to the GPU business unit and that AMD remains competitive there.
So you/Su are saying that the future is practically all APU..