I finally finished Andy Grove's book "Only the Paranoid Survive". It was enlightening to me when it talked about Intel's culture around constructive criticism and providing forums for challenging ideas. I'm not sure how it was in practice as I never worked there - but some aspects of Intel's culture of the 1990s sounded very refreshing, and explains a lot of their success at the time...
The central theme of the book is about "10X inflection points" which is where market forces change drastically enough that a business needs to address it's core business completely or else suffer great losses. With this in mind, it appears there have been several 10X inflection points that Intel doesn't seem to have properly responded to at all:
- The Rise of Mobility (~2008+), Intel's response was too little too late, and they're still paying for this in terms of limited market TAM, and scale of in-house foundry services.
- "AI" (~ 2022+), Intel's response is confusing at best (multiple semi relevant product lines), and they're not leveraging their software strengths here like they should be. They're not leading anything here.
- The looming end of the cost part of Moore's Law ($/mm2 cost decreases appear to be flattening) - Intel flip flopping on IDM vs outsource is the key point here - IMO they would (have been/) be better off sticking to one or the other. By changing strategies multiple times they're diluting the value of either choice.
- The fading relevance of general purpose CPUs (https://semiwiki.com/artificial-int...-warning-foretold-todays-architectural-pivot/) - Intel gets a partial pass here as they have finalled delved into discrete GPUs, and they appear to be adding accelerators galore to their Xeon chips, but I don't think they're doing nearly enough given how many others are "making" instead of "buying" (Intel).
(I do credit Intel for "dealing" with the end of Dennard scaling though in 2006; Tick Tock, and a focus on perf/watt was a good pivot).
..
I know LBT is focusing on some basics right now - improving fiscal and engineering discipline, and customer management.. but I think it's the next steps (strategically dealing with these inflection points) that are going to make or break Intel. They appear to have a lot more work to do than they will have available workforce..
P.S. None of this was written by AI, all hallucinations, spelling errors, logical fallacies, and grammar failures are mine alone.
The central theme of the book is about "10X inflection points" which is where market forces change drastically enough that a business needs to address it's core business completely or else suffer great losses. With this in mind, it appears there have been several 10X inflection points that Intel doesn't seem to have properly responded to at all:
- The Rise of Mobility (~2008+), Intel's response was too little too late, and they're still paying for this in terms of limited market TAM, and scale of in-house foundry services.
- "AI" (~ 2022+), Intel's response is confusing at best (multiple semi relevant product lines), and they're not leveraging their software strengths here like they should be. They're not leading anything here.
- The looming end of the cost part of Moore's Law ($/mm2 cost decreases appear to be flattening) - Intel flip flopping on IDM vs outsource is the key point here - IMO they would (have been/) be better off sticking to one or the other. By changing strategies multiple times they're diluting the value of either choice.
- The fading relevance of general purpose CPUs (https://semiwiki.com/artificial-int...-warning-foretold-todays-architectural-pivot/) - Intel gets a partial pass here as they have finalled delved into discrete GPUs, and they appear to be adding accelerators galore to their Xeon chips, but I don't think they're doing nearly enough given how many others are "making" instead of "buying" (Intel).
(I do credit Intel for "dealing" with the end of Dennard scaling though in 2006; Tick Tock, and a focus on perf/watt was a good pivot).
..
I know LBT is focusing on some basics right now - improving fiscal and engineering discipline, and customer management.. but I think it's the next steps (strategically dealing with these inflection points) that are going to make or break Intel. They appear to have a lot more work to do than they will have available workforce..
P.S. None of this was written by AI, all hallucinations, spelling errors, logical fallacies, and grammar failures are mine alone.