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AMD’s x86 CPU share gains against Intel in the desktop and server segments were due in part to ‘surprisingly strong’ shipments of the company’s Ryzen 5000 processors as well as its 4th ...
Its server share (compared primarily to Intel) is now 23.6% compared to 18% a year ago. For Desktop processors, aka Ryzen, AMD's share has increased to 23.9% compared to 19.2% a year ago.
Both AMD and Intel saw declines in server CPU shipments in line with typical seasonality trends, but AMD managed to nudge its share up to 23.6%, up from 23.1% last quarter and 18% a year ago.
In fact, the new AMD desktop CPU beat 1,450 other chips to gain its new title. You'd think this would put the Threadripper 9980X on the fast track to our best gaming CPU list, but that's where you ...
AMD Threadripper PRO 9995WX tops multithreaded charts with 96 cores, crushing its server cousin EPYC 9755 and signaling unmatched desktop workstation performance.
Intel has fixed a high-severity CPU vulnerability in its modern desktop, server, mobile, and embedded CPUs, including the latest Alder Lake, Raptor Lake, and Sapphire Rapids microarchitectures.
AMD took a 23.9% unit share of the desktop market in the first quarter, up 4.1% QoQ and 4.7% YoY. Its revenue share also saw impressive gains, up to 3.3% quarterly/3.8% annually to reach 19.2%.
TL;DR: AMD's server CPU market share surged to 39.4% in Q1 2025, with projections to exceed 40% by year-end and reach 50% in 2026, challenging Intel's dominance. Strong growth in desktop and ...
In Q1 2024, desktop processors accounted for 27 percent of the market, down from 32 percent in Q1 2023, as mobile CPUs increased their market share from 68 percent to 73 percent.
That is a healthy gain, though still behind the desktop and server market shares. More impressive is AMD's revenue share gain, at 14.9% compared to just 10.9% a year ago.
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