Benchmarking Utility Shows AMD Ryzen Rapidly Stealing Market Share From Intel (hothardware.com) 119
According to PassMark, which publishes a benchmarking utility called PerformanceTest, the launch of Ryzen chips has resulted in a surge in AMD's share of its CPUs being tested. From a report: In the first quarter of last year, just 20.1 percent of tests were performed on AMD hardware, versus 79.8 percent on Intel chips. The gap widen by the end of the year, with AMD accounting for 17.8 percent of all tests run through Passmark's software, with Intel jumping up to 82.2 percent. Fast forward to the quarter than just ended and things are looking a bit different. AMD's share has climbed to 26.2 percent, while Intel's has slipped to 73.7 percent. Obviously Intel is still dominating, but what this shows us is that AMD was able to take a nearly 10 percent chunk out what is probably the enthusiast market from Intel. The reason we believe this is largely relegated to the enthusiast market is because AMD's Ryzen architecture is brand new, and that would be the most logical explanation as to why its numbers have suddenly spiked at the expense of Intel.
Selection Bias (Score:5, Insightful)
Limiting your market share sampling to people who run benchmarks is certainly not the best way to figure out how many CPUs are being sold.
That said, good on AMD for producing a chip that actually competes with Intel.
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It's probably a decent way to measure the enthusiast market though.
I would assume an over representation of AMD though, as it's a new thing, so people may have a certain level of excitement to benchmark it.
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Re:Selection Bias (Score:4, Informative)
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Please explain this "thinming" thing. Anything like a "thin mint"? Those are tasty!
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So another set of data with a heavy selection bias?
Really? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Really? (Score:4, Funny)
What the fuck is with all of you cock suckers calling each other names in this thread? You morons are fucking ignorant.
Re: Really? (Score:1)
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Thank you, I try.
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It's probably a decent way to measure the enthusiast market though.
No, precisely because of:
I would assume an over representation of AMD though, as it's a new thing, so people may have a certain level of excitement to benchmark it.
I have no doubt that AMD has gained market share (they basically had nowhere to go but up and released a great line of CPUs). But there's no reliable way to quantify it without paying big $$$ to analyst firms for sales data.
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Also the enthusiast tag is probably not completely accurate. I would suggest mid-range enthusiasts. The high end is still clearly Intel only territory. That might change in the next two quarters, but since they didn't report which processors were being tested, just that AMD's percentage rose, the article is mostly click bait. A hothardware special in other words.
enthusiast? (Score:2)
As someone who would have put themselves in the "enthusiast" category, I can say that many (if not most) who've been around the block wouldn't use a benchmark utility in the first place.
While synthetic benchmarks might give you a real general sense of performance they are at best poor, and at worst, terrible. I recall not only benchmark companies cheating, but in additional the graphic card companies cheating. Optimizing card performance for benchmarks rather than for real life situations.
Anyway, as you sai
Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes. On most benchmarks nowadays you can publicly post your results. Part of those results is the hardware and software configuration of your system. Its not rigorously statistical, but benchmark programs that publicly post results have long been used for mining data on OS, CPU, and and computer manufacturer marketshare trends.
The fact that AMD is picking up marketshare so quickly isn't really surprising. Ever since the first Athlons beat the pants off of Intel, AMD has been the one the nerds root for. First of all Intel has a reputation for being microsoft-style predatory. Secondly, Athlon and then the AMD64 instruction set was innovative with an elegance that had a lot of nerd appeal. It looked for a while, though, that AMD weren't going to turn it around. I was worried they were destined to end up like Cyrix. I was excited to hear they had something in the pipeline that would make them competitive again, and even maybe market leaders. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one who would like to see AMD take off.
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The Ryzen parts have some really great features too. The Pro ones in particular support encrypted RAM, finally closing the cold boot security hole. Plenty of PCIe lanes too, and all for a fraction of the price of a similarly performing Intel part with fewer features.
Re: Wow... (Score:1)
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)
Intel has a reputation for being microsoft-style predatory
Microsoft is amateurish in its predatory practices next to Intel.
A hypothetical situation.
A certain former PC powerhouse with a Q in their name had the fastest system bus architecture in the industry at the time. Chip company I requested access to the architecture so they could design their CPU's to take full advantage of the bus. Chip company I signed a NDA and all the legal mumbo jumbo about not stealing IP. Six months later Chip company I introduces system boards with the bus running on their own silicon. Company sues. Chip company I says OK since you are suing us we cannot sell chips to you directly. You will have to by them from a re-seller. Company knows this will bankrupt them in short order and agrees to license bus for free.
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Wrong decade.
Ask Carly Fiorina what happened to the company with a Q in its name. She should know. She almost destroyed HP with it.
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They had some great engineering going on but never let an engineer run a company.
Other factors? (Score:1)
Re:Other factors? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Never underestimate Intel. They could easily rush production on the next generation or a process bump or something else by throwing a lot of money at it. With the AMD64 / Pentium D stuff where Intel was caught flat footed with nothing they had a better chip in 2 years. I suspect Intel has been sandbagging performance waiting to see what AMD could do and they could already have something sampling that will be better.
Either was it's good for the consumer because competition from AMD always drives down prices.
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Most people have no idea about that at all. And they would not purchase a Ryzen processor as it has an equivalent inside of it. Although Lisa Su did say "they would think about" open sourcing the firmware for it.
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I like AMD (Score:1)
I like AMD. It is the best. I think that everyone should use AMD.
T&J (Score:2)
Don't forget Butch...
Maybe.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe people tend to run benchmarks on their brand-new hardware, and not the hardware that they've been using for a while?
Just a thought.
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Pfft, that's logical thinking and doesn't support a clickbait headline.
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But that doesn't mean that AMD has more marketshare which is the ultimate claim being made in the headline. People may still be buying lots of already released Intel hardware and don't feel the need to rebenchmark it.
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The headline says: "Benchmarking Utility Shows AMD Ryzen Rapidly Stealing Market Share From Intel". AMD is gaining more marketshare if AMD is in more new PCs It doesn't mean that X% of the total market is going to AMD. It implies that X% of new PCs are AMD compared to Y% in the last several years.
People may still be buying lots of already released Intel hardware and don't feel the need to rebenchmark it.
This is a possibility; however, it can also be true that people are buying existing AMD hardware and not benchmarking it either.
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It implies that X% of new PCs are AMD compared to Y% in the last several years.
No, it only implies that a niche group of people heavily skewed by selection bias are benchmarling more AMD CPUs. It says absolutely zero about sales or stealing marketshare. This is as silly as the people who claim net stats about Linux marketshare are wrong until the numbers show negatively for Microsoft. At that point, the previously flawed methodology becomes infallible gospel.
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So people are buying new hardware and benchmarking it. Then we're seeing a ~10% increase in the purchase of new AMD systems. That's the point of the article.
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The headline says "stealing marketshare from Intel". The number of people bechmarking systems does not back up that wild claim.
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It may be hyperbole, but if AMD is gaining market share at the expense of Intel, "stealing" is a word for it.
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Sure, but that's big IF without actual sales data.
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As the article explains, the data is not a direct stand-in for sales data. But do to the breadth and volume of the set, it is a reasonable representation of popularity. If something is more popular, there's generally more of it.
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Sure, and vendors tend to sell people brand-new hardware, and not the hardware that they already own and use. :)
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Re: Maybe.... (Score:1)
AMD Delivers.... (Score:2)
What seems to be happening is AMD delivered a good processor with good performance..
I built a machine with one this month for my kid. Very good performance for the power consumed if you ask me. You do have to throw expensive memory at them, but not THAT much more expensive...
I'm guessing my experience is not unique and it's nice to know that I'm not alone. However, all this really says is that folks who are building performance systems and are interested enough in their system's performance to run a ben
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Re: AMD Delivers.... (Score:1)
Good an AMD .. bad on conjecture (Score:1)
Eh, as irrelevant now as when published a week ago (Score:2)
I read that article a week ago (possibly not from slashdot, so at least it might not be a dupe) and its conclusion seemed preposterous to me. You see sometimes websites or services (e.g. Steam) making claims about "market' behavior by extrapolating their own user data, and to a point you can say that they might represent a limited market - e.g. Steam pretty much has the "gaming market". But a benchmark making claims about market share after the release OF A NEW CPU ARCHITECTURE???
I want AMD to succeed, as w
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It is trends that matter, not data points. Every moment of the entire arc of Chrome winning the browser war could be captioned, "Microsoft still #1."
Intel doubles down with VROC scam (Score:5, Interesting)
They forced board makers to rush out the X299 motherboards 2 months ahead of schedule... and after spending some time with one, I can say Intel has a problem on its hands.
Intel promises no bottlenecks in their newest chipset for RAID performance - up to 20 drives, SSD or nvme, can be used. Performance has been measured at up to 16GB/s, which seems incredible... they also promise "RAID-0 for free"
Why for free?
Because the new X299 motherboards have a "VROC Upgrade Key" socket. Unless you pony up more cash to Intel, some of the RAID features only work with Intel storage (hence the "Optane-ready" logo on these motherboards). As for RAID-0, there is Free, and then there is "free" - On the board I had, the Gigabyte X299 Gaming 7, the third nvme slot could not be used to build a RAID-0 array at all without the key (or possibly an intel-branded nvme). Worse, the RAID-0 arrays would not be recognized by Windows as BOOTABLE, which is kind of the whole point. All this is "fine print" stuff, or buried in poorly written chinglish manuals.
So, spend $400 on a new motherboard, $1000 on an intel 10-core CPU, and... no bootable RAID-0 array for you, because you didn't buy Intel Optane sticks. No technical reason for this, just a DRM key that enables artificially hobbled features on your system.
Did I mention that the VROC key isn't even available yet? Not for ANY price.
I can safely say my next system will NOT be an Intel system. Screw them and their "VROC" scam.
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I didn't fully believe you, so I had to Google it. And omfg, duck that noise.
That really turns me off of future Intel products.
http://www.pcworld.com/article... [pcworld.com]
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My Gigabyte Z170X Gaming 5 motherboard and two Plextor NVMe sticks begs to differ. It boots fine on Intel RAID, as have my last three builds prior with SSDs.
When you spend $400 on a motherboard, and $1000 on an i9 CPU, there should be no excuse not to have the full capabilities enabled.
It is greed, pure and simple, on Intel's part. If they want to maintain market share, this is NOT how you do it.
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Ah, I should have stated.... my Z170X motherboard predates Intel's "VROC" nonsense. It also has bottlenecks and obviously, I don't have the same number of PCIe lanes as the i9-7900X on an X299 motherboard.
Not supported by Steam hardware survey (Score:2)
AMD is still on a downward [steampowered.com] trend on Steam, which you would think has a higher share of enthusiast CPUs than average. Of course those are accumulated figures, not new sales so changes will be smaller and depend on market share of retired processors but the rumors of AMDs recovery are a bit exaggerated. The Q2 guidance is 12% YoY growth but compared to their downhill slide they have a long climb back up to profitability.
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The Steam survey is not representative unfortunately. It keeps saying VR headset adoption has flatlined, when we know for certain it is going up. Two AMD Ryzen processors are in the top 5 sellers on Amazon right now. I know it's hard to get actual data without the companies releasing their sales figures, but Ryzen really is converting more people to AMD.
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I have multiple AMD PCs on steam. But I don't submit to the Hardware Survey they ask for. None of their business what I use. I also don't buy whats popular, I value price to performance. Although I am a computer hardware nerd, I still have to mind price... So I can buy more hardware.
Re: Not supported by Steam hardware survey (Score:1)
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Resources like what? More ads for games I don't want to play? There is no reason at all for them to know what hardware is inside of my computers. That's like saying that the government should know what time of day I take a shit so they can "allocate resources based on this information"
Sounds good (Score:2)
It sounds like a good chip; does AMD still have a heat-intolerance problem? Dunno if that's ancient history now, but as my systems end up running in rather warm environments, Intel's downstepping (rather than frying) when over-warm was really a fantastic feature.
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No. The Rysen chips are running cooler than their similar Intel counterparts. Also there TDPs are better too. The days of the FX's heating a room are over.
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I still have an FX8320 and it idles around 25C. Under full load I've seen it spike up to about 60C, but that's not the norm. This is with the stock cooler that came in the box. I run Funtoo Linux with CPU frequency scaling on, so I suspect that helps quite a bit.
I built this system in early 2013. Only paid around $550 CAD for the CPU, motherboard, and 32GB of DDR3 RAM.
Still runs great. If I were to upgrade today, I'd go for a Ryzen 1700. According to Passmark it would nearly double my performance, and halve
Steam hardware shows a slight uptick in... (Score:1)
...6 and 8 core processors. Since previously those would be limited to Intel Extreme or Xeon CPUs, a number of people are likely buying Ryzen R5 and R7 processors.
Dell, HP, and other manufacturers prefer to ship with integrated GPUs and AMD's APU hasn't launched yet. The trick here is that customers who buy a Dell might not even care what processor they get.
On the other other hand, I assume AMD is going to aggressively undercut Intel in laptop processors, so they'll probably gain market share there.
Finally...competition... (Score:2)
When I get around to it, I'll get or build a Ryzen 7 box. While it's not the 'fastest
So wait, Ryzen is a CPU? (Score:2)
Because of all the garbage gaming news, I had forgotten AMD even made CPUs! Typically most of what you see is about their GPUs since they bought out ATI. I would love to get off of Intel and back onto AMD, particularly with the management engine and other binary-only spyware Intel likes to sneak on to their products. I remember fondly my allegiance to them and the K7 CPU! inventing the amd64 wasn't half-bad either. I just wish they would have kept ATI separate so that I could tell the difference.
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Ryzen has a management engine too. If you want chips without them, you're stuck on old hardware.
POLICE! theft larcency robbery indecency (Score:2)
But officer, I was only trying to achieve attain gain reach recapture reclaim recoup recover retake take back win back repossess retrieve salvage reacquire reattain.