So Kureshii... your worried that built in graphics cards are gonna be replaced by IGPs? That's a GOOD thing. Will IGPs effect gaming/enthusiaists dedicated graphics cards? I havn't seen a single IGP that can rate up to an ATI 5770 or 6850 or a GTX 460/560. Having dedicated graphics is great, but that doesn't mean IGPs are aimed to replace them.
You misread. The 5450/6450 cards were released as IGP alternatives anyway; they are now no longer needed except as upgrades on older platforms. Intel doesn’t need the gaming segment, and likely won’t jump into gaming cards. What worries me is that AMD’s going to lose the IGP game (for reasons laid out in earlier posts), which would
Relegate AMD graphics to only the gaming sector.PC gaming is still very much a niche sector, and AMD doesn’t have anything up against Tegra at the moment. [Flashback to AMD failing to gain a foothold in the mobile/tablet market]. That means they’re doomed to lose smartphone presence at this rate, which leaves them with only the PC gaming segment (which they still have to fight Nvidia for).
Though they claim their cards are capable of HPC, AMD’s FireStream doesn’t enjoy the same level of development tools that Tesla has with CUDA. It makes a lot of difference to enterprise customers who expect not only performance, but service support and customisable solutions (think Radeons in 1U form factor, desktop add-on form factor, with custom cooling solutions, etc). The ones using Radeons for HPC at the moment are
niche HPC consumers; they make for nice PR, but you don’t earn money targetting only them. You need to capture a wider slice of the HPC market, and it takes more than just claiming Radeons can do HPC as well. I’m afraid AMD simply hasn’t been doing too well in GPGPU computing. OpenCL is still buggier and not as stable as CUDA, and has fewer libraries for development.
Relegate their APUs to the budget segment rather than the "better-integrated-graphics" alternative to Intel processors.Right now, the Lynx (desktop Llano) platform is seen as a better-IGP alternative to Sandy Bridge, despite weaker CPU performance. That won’t last if Intel catches up in IGP performance. I don’t doubt that with the same GPU TDP limits and power consumption AMD would outclass Intel, but looking at Bulldozer’s performance I’m not so sure AMD can match Intel in the TDP-balancing game. If Intel catches up in IGP performance, AMD’s only position for APUs will be as a budget, lower-performing alternative (euphemistically referred to as “value-for-money” computing).
Kill their netbook/nettop presenceIntel has managed to make mobile Haswell quad-cores (i7-QM) with 35W TDP; these were 45W parts in Sandy Bridge and prior (with Extreme processor models going to 55W). This is in line with Intel’s intent to hit the
10–20W TDP window with mobile Haswell. (Haswell is supposed to get configurable TDP, so mobile parts can be dropped to 20W TDP when desired, and raised back to 30+W TDP when cooling capability allows.) If this doesn’t sound scary yet, keep in mind that Bobcat (AMD’s high-end Brazos, aka E350) has 18W TDP and graphics comparable to the lower-end Sandy Bridge HD Graphics 2000. Soon, Atom won’t be competing against Brazos; mobile Core will be doing that instead. I don’t see how Brazos is going to win that matchup. The last thing AMD needs is to lose more market segments without winning any others.