Why Apple Picked Intel Over AMD 376
An Anonymous Reader writes "Macworld has a piece looking at why Apple chose Intel chips over AMD's offerings when it decided to move away from IBM." From the article: "The reason, industry analysts say, is that Jobs has a clear goal in mind: innovative designs. And such designs require the lowest-voltage chips, which IBM and Freescale were not going to make with the PowerPC chip core--and which AMD has not yet perfected 'This is a practical, pragmatic Steve Jobs decision,' says Shane Rau, Program Manager, PC Semiconductors for market research firm IDC. Intel serves up the most complete line of low-power chips for mobile and small form factor computers, and a good-looking future roadmap for it. Also, Intel's mammoth production capacity erases any supply worries. "
Transmetta (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Transmetta (Score:5, Informative)
From the blurb: Also, Intel's mammoth production capacity erases any supply worries.
Re:Transmetta (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Transmetta (Score:5, Funny)
Because that extra 't' increases power consumption.
Re:Transmetta (Score:3, Insightful)
Nobody else in the industry has the capacity to produce like Intel does. Transmeta least of all because they're a fabless house.
Re:Transmetta (Score:2)
Re:Transmetta (Score:3, Funny)
The lady friend of Transmeta?
Re:Transmetta (Score:4, Funny)
Because they need to process data speedily, not soybeans [admworld.com].
Hmm (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not about Apple... (Score:4, Insightful)
This is really Intel's way of getting some of their leverage back. If Dell tries to pull one of those, "Well... You know... AMD is offering...", then Intel will be in the position to tell them to do what they like.
Re:It's not about Apple... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Now imagine Apple keeping this phenomenal growth up, and you get the idea that cost-savings is going to be a big deal at this size.
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Ummm, who else... (Score:5, Informative)
HP is larger than Apple...
Then who?
In the US, Apple is the #4 manufacturer of PCs, they were #8 in global sales, but I believe that they have moved up to #6 or so...
What is my point? They are one of the LARGEST manufacturers of PCs... period. The fact that there are BIGGER companies doesn't make them a small player. Their aren't many bigger sellers of machines on the planet (there are about 5 of them)... Meaning while they aren't the biggest account, there are only 4 accounts that matter more...
Remember, Apple is the #2 seller of operating systems and the #6 seller of PCs, that's not a small account. They ARE a Fortune 500 company (top 300 I believe), meaning that there aren't 300 companies in the US that are bigger than them.
Re:Ummm, who else... (Score:3, Insightful)
What about cost/price? (Score:2, Interesting)
Pragmatic? (Score:5, Insightful)
consummate businessman (Score:3, Interesting)
In this case, AMD would have been the "don't be evil" warm and fuzzy choice (see AMD-v-Intel suit). Transmeta would have been the cool-tech choice. Picking Intel was pure cold business rationality.
Jobs doesn't bend other people's reality so much as exercises his power to mould new realities. This is evident in his string of lucrative indust
double function (Score:5, Funny)
beyond thunderdome... (Score:5, Funny)
-Sj53
Re:beyond thunderdome... (Score:5, Funny)
Please! For the sake of all that is good in the world, the next time you feel the urge to i-Pun, don't.
AMD and Intel (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.tomshardware.com/mobile/20050830/index
It's all about the Pentium(M)s (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple seems to be moving hard toward mobile computing now anyway, so going for the Pentium M is a smart move all around, and it doesn't take much imagination to see those in Mac Mini's and the like in the future.
Myself, I'd have split the difference and gone with AMD for the 64 bit server chips. I think that descision is going to do good things for Sun.
No big deal (Score:2)
Re:It's all about the Pentium(M)s (Score:2)
In any case, the deep beauty of the decision to go with the Intel architecture is that Steve Jobs will be able to play Intel off of AMD *at any time* in the future. There's actual competition to be exploited, and you can bet that it will be exploited.
I am very encouraged to see a focus on efficiency and multi-core processors. It's going to be a wonderful revolution in programming and design.
Thad Beier
Re:It's all about the Pentium(M)s (Score:3, Informative)
P2 was a PPro with MMX, which was *not* basicaly a Pentium. Notably, the PPro used a RISC core and could translate CISC, while the Pentium was straight CISC, and you could run 4 PPros - which you could only run up to two Pentiums (or first-gen PIIs, for that matter). The PPro was also optimized for 32-bit apps, while the Pentium actually outperformed on 16-bit apps at the same clock speed. Otherwise, your lineage is simplistically accurate...
Itanium hasn't been a giant s
Not low voltage but low power (Score:5, Insightful)
Said that it is worth while to mention that IBM is not incompetent. Their embedded cores which are custom designed are even more energy efficient. But again they are expensive (and task specific) and cost drives the market.
Does it really matter much at this point why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps there are better questions to be asking. Namely, what can we do with these new systems that we could not do before?
Re:Does it really matter much at this point why? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Does it really matter much at this point why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hand-optimized asm went the way of the dinosaur years ago. Any games *that* old would run fine in emulation anyway. The biggest obstacle to porting games to the Mac is a C++ API - DirectX.
It's all about the laptops... (Score:5, Insightful)
"..supply worries.." - Isn't Intel SOLD OUT??? (Score:5, Interesting)
"We're sold out on chip sets," Bryant said during a conference call to discuss Intel's third-quarter financial update. "I think chip sets [will] remain tight into the fourth quarter."
Er, this sure seems like a "supply worry" to me!
\burt
Re:"..supply worries.." - Isn't Intel SOLD OUT??? (Score:4, Funny)
Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm really looking forward to OSX on Intel and the sooner the better as far as I'm concerned.
I have a theory as to why Apple aren't coming out with them until sometime next year - I believe they actually want to come out with new machines at the same time as Vista is released. Why?:
1) Microsoft is going to spend (pinkie to mouth) 100 hundred billion dollars on promoting Vista. That's going to make a lot of noise, which Apple can cheaply ride on the back of. Imagine, loads of mainstream publications will cover Vista, and if Apple launches at the same time they'll surely do comparisons.
2) It will be switching time for everyone - current Windows users will be thinking - should I move to Vista? If there is another viable option visible at the same time, then they might consider that too.
3) Steve Jobs may be confident that the next generation of OSX will beat Vista in comparison reviews - hell, the current version (Tiger) has a lot of the features Vista is supposed to have already.
Anyway, that is my theory, which belongs to me and is mine.
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:3, Funny)
hell, the current version (Tiger) has a lot of the features Vista is supposed to have already.
You mean that the current version has a lot of the features that are going to be dropped before Vista is actually released.
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:2)
This is insightful (hint, hint, mods!) and not something I've seen noted before. Sure, for most people (with pre-2004 computers) moving to Vista will require a new box--in practice if not in theory; at the very least, a PITA clean install--and this presents an opening for Apple. If a bunch of reviewers h
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:5, Insightful)
Basically, they will replace G4-based systems first (eMac, mini, portables), since the G4 Macs are currently the most clock-speed restrained. G4 processors are pretty low on power consumption but top out under 2GHz.
The G5 desktop roadmap is good enough to keep going for a while, with small clock speed improvements and a probable move to dual-core G5 chips. Apple also makes their highest profits on the G5 desktops, so they've got an incentive to push that as gently as possible. Look for the switch there to be right to dual-core x86-64 processors. Right now, G5 processors are still competitive with their x86 counterparts, so that's the other reason to concentrate on the G4 models first.
Hopefully they'll change Xserve last. Those things are pretty darned slick as-is.
Vista is currently due at the end of 2006 (about when Apple plans to release Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard"), so Apple should be well into the transition by then. If Vista slips any further, Apple could even be most of the way through the whole process.
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:2)
If they change the XServes at all. They have left the door open for a mixed line if they need it.
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:2)
(convoluted Apple supremacy, "Teh M$ Windoze KILLA" conspiracy theory deleted)
Or, it could be that Apple has a roadmap for how long it is going to take to transition their manufacturing capability, finalize OSX on Intel, and give their ISV time to get their code running on the new OS/hardware. Occam's Razor is funny l
Re:Waiting for OSX on Intel (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not so fast (Score:5, Funny)
Whereas C# has real objects inside your computer!
Apple Management loves Steak, Lobster & Stripp (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, those AMD sales guys can put together a killer Powerpoint presentation, but the Intel guys know that the real key to making the sale is taking the management out for food, fun, and a night they won't be able to tell their wives about. If AMD doesn't figure this out quickly, their sales will continue to lag behind Intel.
This is Sales 101, folks.
Non-controversy (Score:4, Insightful)
Innovate (Score:2, Insightful)
Wait, wasn't it AMD that stepped up with the 1Ghz cpu first?
Oh, weren't they the ones who got the first high performance, low cost 64 bit processors to market?
Geez, haven't they also been dominating the performance side?
Besides, from what I've been reading, the Turion 64 is not far away from the Pentium M. Close enough to call them comparable at least, and the Turion has 64 bi
Re:Innovate (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, could you please take into account that the Mactels aren't out yet, and are planned based on the roadmaps. Also, who cares who made it to 1 GHz first? Who cares that Intels first 1 GHz chip was horrible, and removed from the market. It doesn't matter any more. It doesn't matter any more than t
A possibility (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple being a relatively small consumer of Intel parts could be quite happy with this small volume of fast parts and put out machines that trump the wintel vendor's clock rates.
It is a lesson that Apple learned back in the dark days of Mac clones. Since Apple only refreshes a Mac design a couple times a year people know when it is coming and will hold off for the newer version. When that version comes out there is a big demand spike. To avoid long backorders Apple has to have enough processors in hand to cover the initial orders and enough capacity to keep up with the flow after that. The clone vendors, being a tiny fraction of the Mac market could introduce models with the faster processors as soon as they became available in limited quantities. The double nasty effect was that the clone vendors got the reputation for faster machines since they could bring theirs to market faster and they delayed Apple's ability to get the new xxMhz 68030 to market because instead of stockpiling chips for Apple, Motorola would be selling them to the cloners.
Re:A possibility (Score:3, Insightful)
Jobs used
Re:A possibility (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, right (Score:3, Insightful)
And they sell such huge quanitites that supply is a very important issue. Not.
Intel bunged them in the form of huge discounts, simple as that. No one in their right mind would use Intel processors for desktop machines at the moment and, for that matter, there's no reason Apple couldn't have gone with Intel for the laptops and AMD for the desk.
ALL of which is beside the point that the problem with the PowerPC seems to have been on the compiler side, not the hardware.
TWW
You don't know your Apple history (Score:2)
I'm not drinking the Kool Aid as far as "innovation" goes. From any businessman that's just filler -- the word MicroSoft uses to justify abusing monopoly power. We won't know what it means to Jobs until we see what comes out of Apple's design labs using Pentium Ms.
But to say Apple hasn't had problems with supply is really pretty staggeringly wrong, no offense intended. Anyone who's ever tried to order the latest cool PowerBook
Re:Yeah, right (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny, I don't see Apple shipping any Intel desktops right now. I see them shipping Intel desktops sometime next year, and even later for their pro line. Coincidentally, this is when Intel will ship their Pentium-M-derived desktop chips, and their 64-bit versions. You will not see a Pentium-4-based chip in any production Intel Mac.
ALL of which is beside the point that the problem with the PowerPC seems to have been on th
MDF MDF MDF (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Chipset shortage (Score:2, Insightful)
Sorry but (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it came down to money- in some fashion intel offered them a better deal. I have intel and amd computers and amd has a dramatically better cost/performance ratio. I bet that there is no hard technical reason why Mac couldn't have run on both- if they are going to be Intel only it is for political/financial reasons instead of technical ones.
Deal, and name may be significant too (Score:3, Interesting)
We geeks know that AMD has some good stuff, but I'm sure we can all remember when AMD provided chips like the K6/2 which while technically sound (100mhz front-side bus before the Pentium-2 became common, right?), tended to be sold cheap and built into PCs which also used cheap chipsets and reliability suffered as a result.
Back in the day, the P2 and early P3 and the K6/2 and K6/3 were only really
Relying on roadmap is risky (Score:5, Interesting)
Use AMD64 now, switch to Intel later if they keep their promises.
Re:Relying on roadmap is risky (Score:2)
If they switched to AMD64, then they would only be able to switch the top-end, which is where IBM does very well, not the bottom end, where they are currently losing out.
Intel is already ahead on power... (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple is taking a risk that Intel will not be able to reform their top of the line chips to match AMDs superb offerings. But honestly, tower configurations don't account for much of Apple's sales anyway, so it's not a huge risk.
Anyway, I as I've said before, I think there are other reasons Apple chose Intel over AMD. To get Northbridges with integrated graphics
Obvious... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey, analysts have to eat (Score:5, Insightful)
They're analysts. They're smarter than us. Examples:
"I believe this is a purely negotiating move by Apple to grab some attention and headlines and to point out that they're feeling underappreciated by IBM" - Evin Krewell, editor in chief of the Microprocessor Report, quoted in the Mercury News, May 24, 2005, a few days before Apple announced a switch from IBM to Intel processors.
"You just wouldn't do that. You wouldn't do something that disruptive.'' - analyst Tim Bajarin, quoted in the Mercury News, May 24, 2005, a few days before Apple announced a switch from IBM to Intel processors.
"Stick a fork in 'em - this Apple is cooked." Robert Thomson, Financial Post, 2/20/2003
"For those who love Apple's products, this is all just so typical. This company has made an art of innovation -- from the personal computer itself to the point-and-click operating system -- only to invariably surrender the high sales ground to the boring knock-off artists who copy Apple's best ideas into a new and slightly cheaper model. So it's not surprising Wall Street is already bracing for another disappointment." - Steve Maich, Macleans.ca, 2005/05/09
Count David Goldstein, president of the Dallas-based growth-strategy consulting firm Channel Marketing Corp., among the critics of Apple's retail plans. "It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever for them to open retail stores," he says. - May 01, 2001 Macworld Magazine
I collect quotes like these, to remind myself why trusting analysts about anything is generally unwise.
Wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
By using x86 CPUs, Apple has effectively lost the possibility to claim that their systems are magically faster than PCs (they never were, but they could claim it, because some people will fall for anything). So why pay more when the best they could aspire to was a claim that they were "on par with the fastest PCs"?
And, of course, there's another element: DRM. Intel cut Apple a good deal because it gives them a chance to start edging their hardware-based DRM into the market (think iTunes). Apple is happy to include DRM as long as they get a discount on the hardware.
Having your cake and eat it too! (Score:2)
Such a switch would require a hardware change, but probably not a software change, given AMD's history of trying to provide backward opcode compatibility.
A wise decision by Apple, even tho this is old news.
The analysis is missing a crucial point (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, Intel has more offerings and better roadmap, and volume discounts, and programmers, and prestige....
But this particular analysis is not mentioning the fact that Intel can give you a system, head to toe. That will allow Apple to move the R&D cost of mobo desing to something else, like SW engineering, or industrial design.... go figure...
Now, if I put on my aluminum-foil-thinking-cap, I can think of the following arrangement:
Intel debuts a new and improved processor/chipset combo, and gives it to Apple with, let's say, six months advantage over everyone else, as beta testers.... If there are no bugs in the combo, all is nice and dandy. If there are bugs in the combo, Intel correts them in the silicon, for all the PC bunch to use, and Apple, having more control over the platform than anyone else in the indutry, corrects the errors via a BIOS/OS patch, intead of a more costly recall.... Match made in heaven! Apple gets a six months edge, Intel gets a HUGE and cheap field trial of new silicon!
Just my two cents anyway....
In the end, there was not just ONE magic reason, but a host little thing that made Apple choose Intel over AMD, Transmeta, VIA/Cenatur and all the others out there...
It's about future roadmap and delivering on time (Score:5, Insightful)
AMD have a public roadmap into 2006, but nothing long term. Privately, it may be different.
IBM have a roadmap into next week if you're lucky. Privately it may be different, but 3GHz G5s?
AMD has Intel beat at the moment on power consumption on the desktop, we all know that. However Yonah and Merom (and server variants thereof?) are what Apple are interested in. Yonah will come in many variants, with an ULV single core at 5.5W, and dual-core LV at 15W alongside the 35W dual-core standard processor. AMD have Turion however, and it isn't that bad in comparison with the current Pentium M, and 65nm should help them along even more.
It will be interesting to see how next year's processors compare. I think that AMD will remain leading in terms of performance at the high end, but the mobile arena will become very interesting with dual-cores from both company, new 65nm processors, and more to boot.
Re:It's about future roadmap and delivering on tim (Score:2)
How about 3.2GHz, triple core? In the shops November 22nd, Street price of about $350. Of course you have to throw away the xbox they come in...
I'd imagine AMD could be easily integrated. (Score:3, Insightful)
Power... YES... and so much more (Score:3, Interesting)
- ride the tide of CPU speed (no more "megahertz myth").
- pass on processors (try telling IBM that you aren't interested in their minimal speed bump when you are their only client)
- use PC graphics cards without modification
- diversify their product line (if you haven't noticed, the dual G5 is nearly on par with the top of the line Intel... but the middle and lower end systems from Apple aren't even in the ballpark)
As a Mac user, it's a bit hard to swallow that I'm going to have an "Intel Inside" but there are simply too many advantages to overlook. Intel seems very interested in having their processors in everything from handheld devices to super computers... IBM does as well, but do they have the resources?
Re:Power... YES... and so much more (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe they just don't want to go with the underdog (Score:2)
Going with Intel means they no longer have to waste time arguing that their chips are really faster even though the clock rates are lower. Which, granted, wouldn't have been quite such a big issue now that Intel's finally stopped marketing entirely on cycles-per-secon
Power Consumption (Score:4, Interesting)
They also claim that Freescale (former Motorola chip division) cannot achieve these low power levels. I'm not sure where they get this impression from. The PowerPC has always been a low power processor. They are most commonly used in embedded devices, like routers and switches. They keep ratcheting up performance, while trying to keep it under 10Watts.
While the PowerPC's from Freescale won't be at GHz par with the Intel P4's. They aren't far behind the more comparable Pentium M's in clock speed.
IBM, on the other hand, makes CPUs primarily for their workstations. So, their power usage has always been much closer to Intel's..
You guys are totally missing it. (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple was unhappy about the direct attacks AMD was making against Apple on the DAW (Digital Audio Workstation) front. Look at all the inroads AMD is making into the music and video business, and some of the negative comments that were made toward Apple. It's not hard to see why they wouldn't get in bed with AMD.
Slight error in business analysis (Score:3, Interesting)
Um, no.
Intel has been a constraint on supply to customers in the past, and will be again, because they're not clairvoyant, and maintaining enough capacity to handle 100% of the distribution of order-rate excursions is wasting money (for those who slept through Technology Policy of the Firm: it's like building an 80,000 seat stadium for a basketball team; sure, once every 30 years you'll fill it, but the rest of the time, you're eating your hat).
It may have mammoth production capacity (ever try to keep a mammoth down to class-1 cleanroom standards?) but that capacity is not monolithic nor is it readily fungible. It takes years to do some kinds of process changes, and most chip designs are tuned to a single process and could not be simply adapted to be fabricated on another process.
What this means, if Jobs is any kind of mogul with any sense of supply management, is that Intel will have to build capacity tailored Apple's needs.
Which is good++ for Intel, because their real business is building and filling fab lines; designing and marketing chips is a cost to them.
Perhaps what some people are missing is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
And don't forget EFI. I doubt Apple's going to want a crufty old BIOS designed for 8086 machines. Intel has been working on superior alternatives to BIOS (although perhaps not as good as OpenFirmware, but still...).
AMD makes
Jobs ain't stoopid (Score:3, Interesting)
I know y'all hate Intel, but maybe, just maybe, they got something right and Jobs can smell it.
EVERYONE KNOWS WHY APPLE CHOSE INTEL!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Intel has vast software and development resources specifically to help assist in migration to it's processors from rivals. (Although this may be the biggest such case.)
Their resources in the software, compiler, etc. arenas is unparalled. AMD might be pumping out some great chip designs but I seriously doubt they could offer the transition resources of Intel.
However, once Apple is transitioned to x86 and their exclusive contract (5-10 yrs I would guess) with Intel expires. They will then be in place to take opportunity with whichever manufacturer has the better offer at the time.
So essentially, it was a wise long term strategy. Choose the one who can offer the easiest transition as in 2-4 yrs (after they fully transition) who knows who's chips will be faster/cooler/cheaper? After that time. If there is a better alternative chip it would be minimal work to allow for using an AMD x86 as opposed to an Intel x86.
Plain, simple, intelligent....
Laptops outsell desktops _right now_ (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure IBM could have met the requirement (Score:3, Insightful)
See for all its tough talk about innovation, IBM and I suspect any other large command and control organization that's tried to outmanage and outprocess itself out of every dilemna by becoming even more bureaucratic really can't move quickly to do the right thing. And even when it succeeds at moving at all, it's typically the wrong solution poorly executed and overloaded with everyone's personal agenda items.
Moving to a company like Intel which for the most part makes chips and nothing but chips is usually the wise choice for a company looking to use chips. At best IBM's chip division, while capable and smart is only a division and one that gets the shaft more often than not because it's a supplier to all of the other IBM hardware units which are themselves victims of their own bureaucracies.
And if truth were told, if IBM thought there was money to be made in low power chips they would have done it already. Clearly IBM made a decision that Apple's goals did not fit with their own business model.
Xscale? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think Cringely may have brought it up a few weeks back.
Why not x86_64? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The real reason (Score:3, Insightful)
Have Apple PCs ever been ahead in performance? Of course I'm talking about real performance, and not ridiculously narrow, artificial tests to highlight a largely irrelevant strong point.
I don't mean this to discount Apple, and the truth is that virtually any PC (PC including Apple) these days is overpowered for the uses that the average user tasks them with, but I just don't buy the mythology of the hyper-super-mega PowerPC chips - always barnburners on p
Re:The real reason (Score:3, Informative)
it was once, and it was fleeting, but it was glorious.
The door to AMD is still open (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless Apple uses some proprietary Intel instruction set, it can add AMD offerings to its lineup whenever it feels like.
My guess is that Apple chose Intel for their arch switch because:
1) It was easier to pick a single chip partner to do the switch with.
2) Intel likely offered incentives to go with them alone. There may be contracts involved in this, but they won't last forever.
3) Like it or not, Intel is the x86 brand with mindshare in the public eye.
4) AMD probably can't handle the volume of bringing all of Apple's products over to them at the moment.
The fact is that as soon as OS X is x86 it can benefit from the Intel/AMD competition in the same way that Windows and Linux users do today.
The hurdle is converting from PPC to x86. Going from Intel to AMD later on may not even be noticeable. In fact, if you think of the G4/G5 branding in the current Apple world, most consumers don't even know that their G4 is a Motorola chip and their G5 is IBM. They don't care, so long as there's an Apple on the side of the box.
Re:The real reason (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, AMD holds the top-end. Not by an all that huge margin (say 20% on average to be generous) compared to how CPU wars have played out in the past. While AMD has gone from being the absolutely clear bang-for-the-buck manufacturer with the K7 to being the top-end holder with the K8 however Intel has really improved the rest of their product lines. A much overlooked chip today is the (new) Celeron D. 64-bit capable, solid performance, rock-bottom price. I would personally say that Intel offers better budget solutions at the moment.
Other than that however, I have said it before and I'll say it again; Intels desktop Pentium M roadmap can no doubt look great. The Pentium 4 did not work out as they wanted, but Intel has a lot of great engineers (just look how well the Pentium 4 has carried on competing despite the setbacks the design has seen), when they with the next big iteration are freed from the old P4 there will no doubt be a lot of interesting stuff coming from Intel.
Another interesting point is that Intel really is the only CPU maker that actually does more than one product-line at once. AMD kept the K7 around for a budget-line and stripped down the K8 a bit for laptops, but Intel has not just two, but actually three current designs ongoing (the P4, the Itanium and the Pentium M). An Intel roadmap may also contain a lot of goodies directly deriving from the fact that they have the design manpower to actually work on more than one path at once.
Celeron? Give me a break... (Score:3, Insightful)
The Celeron D is okay, but compared to the Sempron again, a joke. You're talking about a chip that is just cheap (and relatively slow) to a Sempron that is cheap and relatively fast. Not to mention, it runs cooler too.
I think I'll echo what everybody else has said. It's a combination of money and laptop opt
Re:Because AMD can't make a decent portable CPU .. (Score:3, Informative)
The only reason is supply
Re:How bout why Mach vs LINUX (Score:2, Funny)
Re:How bout why Mach vs LINUX (Score:3, Insightful)
RSM would be running around shouting "It is GNU-LINUX-OS X!"
ESR would write a totally incomprehensible article claiming that "we won!". Again.
Linus would shrug and say 'whatever'.
There would be a flamewar on lkml between FOSS diehards and Apple engineers over their binary only drivers.
There would be frequent articles on
In short, it would be a
Re:How bout why Mach vs LINUX (Score:2)
Exactly.
Re:How bout why Mach vs LINUX (Score:4, Interesting)
Pretty much. It would perform a little better, particularly on things like MySQL. But for most people the increased performance would be too minor to notice.
And it would have been considerably later to market, since a lot of underlying infrastructure stuff would have had to be ported. That's one reason they didn't do it.
The other reason, of course, being the licensing.
Re:From the GWB school of speech writing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:gah...apple zealots AGAIN (Score:4, Interesting)
Once again, RTFA... it's not about how much power AMD's Athlon64 FX consumes compared to the Pentium XE... The whole article was about low power low voltage chips like the Pentium M. The whole point of the article was that Intel has on the table low power dual core Yonah processors for early next year, while AMD has not disclosed anything about that. Sure AMD has Turion, but that's a single core chip, and it's not fair to compare that to Yonah.
If you payed attention during the Intel Developer Forum, you'll realize that 5x "performance per watt" was compared to Banias, the first Pentium M... which DOES NOT SUCK at performance/watt now.
Intel's Pentium M chips don't suck today... so you're mistaken. The whole article was basically about Pentium M, not Pentium 4 netburst, you buffoon. And moreover, the whole point was future processors, not processors today, so your point about how Intel sucks today is stupid.
Re:gah...apple zealots AGAIN (Score:3, Insightful)
We are going to be stuck with x86 and it's 64bit mutants until the end of time.
Maybe it is because I remember when their was some difference in computers. Lets see which PIV with an Intel mother board and an ATI video card I should buy!
Or which AMD system with an NVidia video board runs Doom3 the fastest.
Boring.
Re:gah...apple zealots AGAIN (Score:2)
Mod parent down (Score:2)
By the way, to the parent poster -- A quick google search will reveal numerous reviews showing that the Pentium-M has the lower power/performance ratio on the market. That's why Intel is dominating in the laptop market.
power != voltage (Score:3, Interesting)
The two are not analogous. Running with a lower voltage (at the same frequency) is based on the properties of the transistors and reflects a more advanced fabrication technique.
I don't know (and am too lazy to check) if the claims in that quote about voltage are true, but if they are then that means Intel has more room for growth in the future (which is probably more important to Apple than what is going on right now).
gah...knee-jerk reactions AGAIN (Score:5, Interesting)
You don't think Apple had access to the new 970s? I seriously doubt that Apple would go through such a wholesale change in technology without running a benchmark or two. It's a good bet that the new 970s don't perform as well as the new Pentiums clock-for-clock, or else Apple would have stuck with PowerPC.
RTFA. This isn't just about desktops. In mobile performance, Pentium M mops the floor with AMD's mobile Athlons.
Yes, yes, we get it. Today's Pentium desktop chips are hot, power-hungry underperformers. Good thing Apple isn't using today's Pentium desktop chips. (Developer Preview loaners excepted, of course.)
Show me an example of true revisionist history, and you may have a point. But the people you derisively refer to as "Apple zealots" are anticipating the new, lower-power Pentiums that Intel announced at IDF just as much as Windows and Linux users.
Re:gah...apple zealots AGAIN (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple will be using PowerPC chips in at least some of it's machines through 2008. There is little reason to think that they won't use the 970FX (low power) or 970MP (dual-core) in a machine between now and then. I think the point you're missing then is that Apple saw what was comming from IBM and still decided to move to Intel. In other words, 13-16 watts is still too much.
According to Intel's presentations on the Conroe/Merom architecture, due 2H06, they're anticipating typical draw down to about 5 watts for the mobile version, and (IIRC) 25 watts for the desktop.
[Intel's] performance per watt numbers are the worst of the whole desktop industry.
And yet, their performace per watt numbers for mobile chips are the best. You seem to be implying that Intel for some reason can't design a low-power chip, when it's quite clear that they can.
And then intel promises apple CPUs which give 5x more "performance per watt". Yeah - that's nice when you consider that they get that "5x" number when they compare it with the current intel chips - which, as everybody knows, they're the worst at performance/watt.
What is your point here? Just because their current chips are the worst doesn't mean their chips next year can't be the best. Five times better than Intel's current might only translate to two or three times better than AMD's current, but that doesn't change the fact that the chip only draws 25 watts. Again, you seem to be implying that Intel can't possibly make a lower power chip just because their current chips draw a lot.
But heck, I absolutely hate how most of apple zealots just don't think - they repeat everything which Jobs tell them
What you should hate is people who assume that they can't possibly be wrong, and that anyone who disagrees with them must be incapable of drawing their own conclusions. In short, yourself.
Re: (Score:2)