Well for starters, how about providing what it is their customers want.
Let’s take for instance AMD’s X3D cache tech.
AMD’s x3D cache has allowed those processors which are generally less performant in workloads than intel, to catch up and beat intel in gaming situations and other situations. Consumers want them for the performance gains and the consumer is paying more for them.
But Intel doesn’t want to do that as “It’s a small market, but we will do that in servers”.
Amd is also using that tech in servers as well. To be competitive in the server space, now Intel is finally going to do it. But only to server chips.
By not doing it for its other chips, intel isn’t competing and therefore there is no competition at all, so what will the consumer do? Buy the better, faster product.
It’s just like what Rory Reed did to AMD. “Our cpu’s are good enough”. That didn’t stop intel from producing faster, better cpu’s which consumers bought in droves, because they were better than the “good enough” cpu’s of AMD.
What does any consumer want? Better, faster products, at the lowest prices they can get them.
Intel needs to start competing asap. In all areas. I mean even look at Altera and what being bought by Intel has done to their revenue.
Why does it take Intel so long to build a Fab compared to TSMC? Why does it take Intel so long to ramp up production?
These need to be looked at.
Take a look at arrow lake chips. You have the cpu, the gpu, the iod, the npu.
A monolithic die has been cut into smaller bits and stuck together. The smaller sizes mean you can get more bits on a wafer and increase the use of a wafer, bringing increased profits. Does it actually save costs compared to ensuring that all the little bits are properly aligned and in place and can connect together and talk seamlessly and with low latencies, or does doing all that require extra manpower, extra thinking, extra logistics, extra interposer, extra robotics machinery, extra testing, extra sorting, extra electricity, yada yada yada. Is it better? Is it faster? Is it actually more competitive and is it actually worth it?
All the little parts are also produced on different nodes. Why is that? They want to maximise profits.
Intel needs some hard questions to ask itself. Like would it be better to get rid of the waste of space npu, and just use that space for a larger GPU that can also do the same thing the npu can do. What is it that my customers actually want. Would they prefer a larger gpu?
Knowing intel, they’d cut the NPU and just try maximise profits leaving the gpu the same size.
That’s all Intel does constantly. Not giving the customer what they want whilst aiming instead for profit.
They will produce a cpu capable of avx512, and then burn off that capability so the customer cant use it, because only the top teired highest cost product that people pay the most for will have it allowed and not burned off.
They do the same with server parts all the time.
I’ll tell you what it makes people do. It makes people hate the damn company
I would find out who has these stupid ideas and fire them.
Next, i would have Intel produce less parts.
You don’t need 100 different server parts.
Intel does need fabs though. Not only that but if it wants big customers, it needs very big fabs.
If it is not building brand new big fabs all the time, then it will fall behind.
I mean, Intel could very well stop fab production and just switch to TSMC. But then they will always be on the same node as the competition…