hist78
Well-known member
"In terms of overall CPUs sold, AMD has finally dethroned Intel after four long years, capturing almost 55% of all orders in Q4 2024. Since this number encapsulates both consumer and workstation-grade offerings, let's go over them individually for more insight. Client CPU sales (Ryzen/Core) see AMD slowly creeping up to Intel, with a substantial jump from just 20% of CPUs sold at the start of 2024 to almost 40% by the end. This is, for the most part, an outcome of Intel's shortcomings; see the Raptor Lake degradation fiasco and Arrow Lake performance hiccups."
"On the contrary, enthusiasts haven't paid much attention to Intel's workstation lineup which has been in AMD's shadow for many years. Since the start of 2021, Intel's workstation market share, per this limited data, has been hovering between 10% and 20% and has not improved since. Just in the last quarter, nine out of ten professionals opted for a Ryzen Threadripper-equipped workstation at Puget Systems."
www.tomshardware.com
"On the contrary, enthusiasts haven't paid much attention to Intel's workstation lineup which has been in AMD's shadow for many years. Since the start of 2021, Intel's workstation market share, per this limited data, has been hovering between 10% and 20% and has not improved since. Just in the last quarter, nine out of ten professionals opted for a Ryzen Threadripper-equipped workstation at Puget Systems."

AMD chips now comprise 55 percent of Puget Systems orders — AMD makes big inroads in professional systems
Is Zen 5 that good or is Arrow Lake falling short of expectations?