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

By Michael Kanellos
Posted on ZDNet News: Apr 20, 2005 11:55:00 PM

Dirk Meyer, the father of the Athlon chip, has become the No. 2 executive at Advanced Micro Devices through a promotion and the practical realities of a corporate reorganization.

Meyer, who came to AMD after stints at Intel and Digital Equipment Corporation, has run the computational products group at AMD for the last several years as a senior and as an executive vice president. The group made chips for PCs and servers.

Last week, the company appointed Meyer to become president and COO of the Microprocessor Solutions Sector, a new group that will oversee all of AMD's microprocessor development, including the development of microprocessors for consumer electronics and embedded systems, formerly a separate division. (AMD also promoted Henri Richard to chief sales and marketing officer.)

The promotion effectively puts Meyer on par with Bertrand Cambou, the CEO of Spansion, an AMD-Fujitsu joint venture on flash memory largely controlled by AMD. Last week, AMD announced it planned to spin off Spansion in an IPO, despite recent financial losses.

With the Spansion IPO, AMD will have only one group, making Meyer the de facto No. 2 man. As stated by an AMD spokesman, "Dirk is the president of...the business unit."

Meyer, along with CEO Hector Ruiz, Chief Technical Officer Fred Weber and manufacturing whiz Bill Siegel, is considered one of the key architects behind AMD's turnaround. Historically, AMD produced chips that were largely based on the same designs Intel used but cost about 25 percent less. This made it difficult to gain market share or turn a profit.

Barred by a legal agreement from using the same bus as Intel on its K7 chips (the code name for the Athlon architecture), AMD created the Athlon, which sported a bus from Digital and other enhancements. Released in 1999, many versions of the chip outperformed equivalent chips at Intel and allowed AMD to return, at least for some quarters, back to profitability.

The chip also helped AMD land design wins with most of the major PC manufacturers.

Dirk Meyer, the father of the Athlon chip, has become the No. 2 executive at Advanced Micro Devices through a promotion and the practical realities of a corporate reorganization.

Meyer, who came to AMD after stints at Intel and Digital Equipment Corporation, has run the computational products group at AMD for the last several years as a senior and as an executive vice president. The group made chips for PCs and servers.

Last week, the company appointed Meyer to become president and COO of the Microprocessor Solutions Sector, a new group that will oversee all of AMD's microprocessor development, including the development of microprocessors for consumer electronics and embedded systems, formerly a separate division. (AMD also promoted Henri Richard to chief sales and marketing officer.)

The promotion effectively puts Meyer on par with Bertrand Cambou, the CEO of Spansion, an AMD-Fujitsu joint venture on flash memory largely controlled by AMD. Last week, AMD announced it planned to spin off Spansion in an IPO, despite recent financial losses.

With the Spansion IPO, AMD will have only one group, making Meyer the de facto No. 2 man. As stated by an AMD spokesman, "Dirk is the president of...the business unit."

Meyer, along with CEO Hector Ruiz, Chief Technical Officer Fred Weber and manufacturing whiz Bill Siegel, is considered one of the key architects behind AMD's turnaround. Historically, AMD produced chips that were largely based on the same designs Intel used but cost about 25 percent less. This made it difficult to gain market share or turn a profit.

Barred by a legal agreement from using the same bus as Intel on its K7 chips (the code name for the Athlon architecture), AMD created the Athlon, which sported a bus from Digital and other enhancements. Released in 1999, many versions of the chip outperformed equivalent chips at Intel and allowed AMD to return, at least for some quarters, back to profitability.

The chip also helped AMD land design wins with most of the major PC manufacturers.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 2 Talkback(s)
Intel now clones AMD
Lucky for intel that they stopped AMD from using their designs. Forcing AMD to innovate allowed Intel to copy AMD's 64 bits, dual cores, No execute virus protection, DDR, speed step, and 3Dnow.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: plantlife424 Posted on: 04/21/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Intel played a helping hand to AMD's success!  Prognosticator | 04/20/05
Intel now clones AMD  plantlife424 | 04/21/05

What do you think?

Click Here
advertisement
advertisement
Click Here

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

  • Thought-provoking progressive ideas on diverse topics that intersect with technology, business, and life, and matter to the world at large. Visit SmartPlanet
  • More from IBM
  • Innovate your business' process model, play against the market, compete against others on our scoreboards and WIN! Try INNOV8 2.0: A BPM Simulator
  • Enabling Real-World Business Transformation through IBM Service Management Read the EMA Analyst Report
Click Here