delong.height
Active member
I don't think people can discount Pat Gelsinger's achievement that easily, nor should it be.Well, the IDM 2.0 honeymoon is officially over. I have seen this with CEO changes in the past. You get 2-3 years to make it work. I never agreed with the 5 Nodes in 4 years strategy, that was doomed from the beginning. Ramping 5 nodes to HVM in four years?AMD is not in Intel's rearview mirror. Nvidia owns AI. Dozens of new chip companies are circling Intel like vultures picking at the carcass. Worst of all, the semiconductor industry is not as healthy as it seems.
Again, Intel can claim process supremacy all they want but unless their financials measure up someone is going to get fired. I think taking Intel private would give them more time but it would not solve the problems they face, if it is even possible.
Bottom line: The semiconductor industry moves very fast and Intel does not, my opinion.
And there is no ramping 5 nodes to HVM in four years. Intel has always been saying 'manufacturing-ready', which is very different from HVM.
And at 2021, AI isn't a buzz word, most people don't care about it. It happened to be this case only when OpenAI give it real world application. And that's things are suddenly turned negative.
When he get on as the chief of INTEL, I remembered exactly who the main competitor was at that time, and it was AMD at data center, Apple at the edge, and TSMC at manufacturing. Nvidia wasn't the competitor at all. Sure the success in GPU made Pat envious. But GPU was still treated as complement to Intel CPU. Nvidia at that time, has this strange coopetition.
The challenging periods should not be talked easily because I was there, I watched the industry going through ups and downs.