I've seen no evidence that your statement is correct. The primary reasons Samsung's foundry business is more likely to be struggling are inability to deliver leading edge process chips with reasonable yields, and inability to convince potential customers Samsung can achieve roadmap parity with TSMC. You can't be a second source foundry without comparable technology and pricing.
Do you have any evidence that potential Intel Foundry customers have competition from Intel products as their fundamental concern? Executive quotes will do.
The chips these three customers designed for internal use aren't good opportunities for Intel's product divisions. Merchant chip product companies, including AMD and Ampere, are too high cost for the specialized requirements of these cloud computing vendors to be competitive at all.
Positioning your personal opinions as assertions of fact without evidence isn't persuasive.
If you need further clarification on my comments, feel free to ask. There’s no need to use unusual phrasing, like in your last paragraph. Remember every blogger here is not writing a PhD paper. If you are not clear or even disagree with their opinions, please just share your thoughts, without attacking other blogger's competency. IMHO, this will promote more idea discussion and attract more people to join SemiWIki.
Samsung has had many conflicts of interest with its customers. The most well-known, and arguably the most damaging one, was the Apple-Samsung conflict. The end result was that Apple moved its processor manufacturing from Samsung to TSMC. And both Apple and TSMC went on to achieve huge success. Samsung not only lost an important customer but also an important resource provider to improve and enhance its manufacturing.
###########
The chips these three customers designed for internal use aren't good opportunities for Intel's product divisions. Merchant chip product companies, including AMD and Ampere, are too high cost for the specialized requirements of these cloud computing vendors to be competitive at all.
Positioning your personal opinions as assertions of fact without evidence isn't persuasive.
Can you please read my posting again:
"Intel’s server and AI division generated only $4.1 billion, just 32.28% of its $12.7 billion total revenue in Q1 2025. In this segment, Intel is also up against formidable competitors, including AMD, Nvidia, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta (Facebook), Broadcom, Qualcomm, and MediaTek."
Let me explain it further:
My comment is about Intel lacking competitive products that the market needs. The Intel Data Center and AI (DCAI) group is facing an onslaught from every direction. AMD, Nvidia, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta (Facebook), Broadcom, Qualcomm, and MediaTek all have, or will have, server and/or AI products that overlap with what Intel is doing or may pursue in the future. Except for MediaTek, every company I mentioned has a larger market capitalization than Intel.
Among these companies, some products may fall under what you might categorize as "niche," which Intel's product division may choose not to pursue. However, many of their offerings are far from niche. AMD’s EPYC and MI300/MI400, Amazon’s Graviton, Google’s Axion, Microsoft’s Cobalt, and especially Nvidia’s Hopper/Blackwell platforms cannot be simply dismissed as niche products.
Additionally, if Google were to ask Intel Foundry to manufacture an Google designed AI processor, should Intel be concerned that this represents a lost opportunity for its own Gaudi AI processor? This is just one example of the kind of conflict of interest that Intel's IDM model is inherently vulnerable to.