WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

866

All of my new systems are AMD Ryzen. They have been working great and I have no complaints so far.

Archive: https://archive.today/rd3iR

From the post:

>For well more than two decades, Intel has been the undisputed leader in the market for datacenter CPUs. Intel's Xeon processors powered the vast majority of servers, whereas AMD's processors commanded a single-digit market share just some seven or eight years ago. However, the situation has changed drastically. While Intel's Xeon CPUs still power the majority of servers, the most expensive machines now use AMD's EPYC processors. This is why AMD's datacenter business unit now outsells Intel's datacenter and AI business group, as observed by SemiAnalysis.

All of my new systems are AMD Ryzen. They have been working great and I have no complaints so far. Archive: https://archive.today/rd3iR From the post: >>For well more than two decades, Intel has been the undisputed leader in the market for datacenter CPUs. Intel's Xeon processors powered the vast majority of servers, whereas AMD's processors commanded a single-digit market share just some seven or eight years ago. However, the situation has changed drastically. While Intel's Xeon CPUs still power the majority of servers, the most expensive machines now use AMD's EPYC processors. This is why AMD's datacenter business unit now outsells Intel's datacenter and AI business group, as observed by SemiAnalysis.
[–] 1 pt

They need to make more consumer silicon. I was just in a position to acquire several dozen laptops for my company. I wanted all ryzen cpus but no OEM would make a workstation grade laptop with one. Of the five skus I evaled only one had an AMD CPU and that was for my daily driver.