On TechRepublic: Windows 7: Slower to boot than Vista?
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Michael Kanellos
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 4, 2003 1:32:00 AM

Although Advanced Micro Devices managed to gain some lost ground from a year ago, Intel recovered market share from its rival in the third quarter.

Intel accounted for 82.6 percent of the processors that are made on the x86 architecture and shipped in the third quarter, up 1.2 percent from the second quarter, according to figures from Mercury Research.

AMD, meanwhile, saw its market share sink by 0.8 percent, from 16.6 percent to 15.8 percent.

Although down sequentially, AMD did manage to recover lost ground from the third quarter last year, when it was struggling with inventory surpluses. Then, Intel had 85.9 percent market share, while AMD had a 12.4 percent share. Mercury analyst Dean McCarron explained, though, that chip industry executives generally concentrate on the sequential, rather than the year-to-year, comparisons.

"AMD is down a little from Q2 but up from a year ago," he said.

Intel's market share boost was helped in part by shipments of notebook chips. Notebook processors accounted for 19 percent of the x86 processors that shipped in the third quarter, an all-time high. Notebook chips accounted for 18 percent of the market in the second quarter.

In its third-quarter conference call, Intel said it shipped a record number of processors.

The figures track the shipment of x86 processors--such as the Pentium 4, Xeon, Athlon and Opteron chips--that are used in PCs, notebooks and servers. The two companies account for the overwhelming number of x86 chips.

The figures do not include IBM chips that are used in Apple Computer's machines or the Intel processors Microsoft puts inside the Xbox gaming console. With Xbox factored in, Intel obtained an 83.4 percent market share, up from 82.5 percent in the second quarter, while AMD pulled in 15 percent of the market, down from 15.7 percent in the second quarter.

Intel is the exclusive provider of processors for the Xbox for now, having beaten out rival AMD in a hotly contested contract bid in 2001. Microsoft plans to use IBM processor technology in future versions of the console, McCarron noted. Although the details of the IBM-Microsoft alliance are somewhat vague, analysts believe that Microsoft will use an IBM chip in Xbox 2.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 8 Talkback(s)
Did I read this exact same drop last quarter?
Deja vu?
see http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103_2-5059231.html
"dropping from 16.6 percent to 15.7 percent" Q1-Q2
now "from 16.6 percent to 15.8 percent" Q2-Q3?
What gives?
Does anyone know how AMD is doing?... (Read the rest)
Posted by: cvev Posted on: 11/05/03 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Chip recovery just in time  bidemytime | 11/03/03
There's a good reason for this...  BitTwiddler | 11/04/03
actually  doh123 | 11/04/03
Tech Talk re: XP2600+  Peter Komisar | 11/04/03
RE: Tech Talk re: XP2600+  Oggie_z | 11/04/03
Thanks!  Peter Komisar | 11/04/03
Market share isn't everything  caromerofwd@... | 11/04/03
Did I read this exact same drop last quarter?  cvev | 11/05/03

What do you think?

Click Here
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Enterprise Applications

  • Check out some of the easiest and most powerful ways to boost productivity while saving money on your application infrastructure. See ZDNet's comprehensive Enterprise Application resource center, now!
  • New Online Dashboard
  • Read about top issues IT decision-makers face every day, plus get cost effective solutions to real life IT problems. Oracle Topline