AMD vs INTEL - THE BATTLE FOR BEST CPU BRAND
By ioplus3
When I was a Tech Novice, my first PC which seller assembled
had Intel Pentium Dual Core CPU, but when I gained some knowledge, I straight
away jumped on AMD bandwagon and got an AMD Phenom II X6 processor for my
second processor. But, the third time I got Intel i7-7700K and now for my
fourth build I am going to get AMD Ryzen 3700X. So, you can see I am jumping
trains here. Since my second PC, my choices reflect the market trend and what’s
happened with Intel and AMD.
To Explain which brand is better we need to go over a history lesson about both companies and technology they introduced.
In 1971, Intel was the among the small companies which were
competing in the market to get a foothold in the CPU market. They introduced
there first CPU Intel 4004 (4-bit, 7.4KHz). But it was Intel 8086, a 16-bit,
clocked at 10MHz & capable of addressing 1MB of RAM, launched in 1978,
which laid the groundwork for next 50 years. It gave rise to x86 Architecture which
eventually became Intel's most successful line of processors & is still
used in most of our devices.
Meanwhile, In 1975 AMD launched its first processor Am9080, a reverse-engineered clone of Intel 8080 (8-bit, 2MHz) which was launched in 1974, without a license from Intel. Later in 1981, IBM created it’s PC and wanted Intel’s x86 CPUs but only under one condition that Intel gets a second-source because if something goes wrong with Intel itself they have another source to fall back on. Thus, Intel and AMD came under a 10-year technology exchange agreement.
Meanwhile, In 1975 AMD launched its first processor Am9080, a reverse-engineered clone of Intel 8080 (8-bit, 2MHz) which was launched in 1974, without a license from Intel. Later in 1981, IBM created it’s PC and wanted Intel’s x86 CPUs but only under one condition that Intel gets a second-source because if something goes wrong with Intel itself they have another source to fall back on. Thus, Intel and AMD came under a 10-year technology exchange agreement.
Throughout 1980s AMD remained Intel’s second source and
manufacture Intel CPUs. AMD launched Am286 in 1984 copy of Intel’s 80286 for
IBM Clones which was a rapidly growing market.
In 1985, Intel 386 DX was launched which was the first
32-bit x86 processor capable of addressing up to 4GB of RAM a limitation which
was not lifted for next 20 years. But Intel stopped giving AMD exact second
source designs. While AMD has x86 license to work with, but they don’t have the
CPU designs to develop the new CPU.
Thus, AMD developed Am386 a clone of Intel 80386, but in 1987 Intel dragged AMD to court saying that contract covered CPU designs for 80286 and prior CPU designs while AMD interpretation of the contract was that it covered all the derivatives of x86 family for 10 years. AMD finally won the case and launched Am386 in 1991. It sold millions of units, positioning AMD as a legitimate competitor to Intel, rather than being merely a second source for x86 CPUs. While Intel 80386 was clocked at 33MHz, AMD Am386 ran at 40MHz priced at lower cost. The legal battle between intel and AMD lasted till 1995, but had intel win the prices of CPUs would have been significantly higher. It’s the competition that brewed between both the companies ultimately benefitted the consumer.
Thus, AMD developed Am386 a clone of Intel 80386, but in 1987 Intel dragged AMD to court saying that contract covered CPU designs for 80286 and prior CPU designs while AMD interpretation of the contract was that it covered all the derivatives of x86 family for 10 years. AMD finally won the case and launched Am386 in 1991. It sold millions of units, positioning AMD as a legitimate competitor to Intel, rather than being merely a second source for x86 CPUs. While Intel 80386 was clocked at 33MHz, AMD Am386 ran at 40MHz priced at lower cost. The legal battle between intel and AMD lasted till 1995, but had intel win the prices of CPUs would have been significantly higher. It’s the competition that brewed between both the companies ultimately benefitted the consumer.
In 1993, AMD also cloned Intel 80486 and sold it as Am486 at
a lower cost which also took a big chunk out of Intel’s profit.
Beginning in 1986, AMD adapted RISC (Reduced Instruction
Set Computer) with their own AMD Am29000 (29k) processor, instead of
CISC (Complex Instruction Set Computer) which Intel used and survived as an
embedded processor.
With the end of 10-year tech exchange contract high reverse
engineering costs, AMD decided to develop its own chips.
In 1993, Intel launched its first Pentium, dubbed as P5. AMD
answer to that was K5 launched in 1996. AMD’s first x86 processor entirely
developed by AMD based on RISC. It had a great design which bypassed Pentium
and took fight head-on with Pentium Pro.
In 1997 Intel launched Pentium II (P6) & AMD launched K6
in the same year and K6-2 in 1998. In 1999 Intel launched Pentium III and AMD
launched K6-3 to compete with it. The great thing about K6 series was that it
was designed to fit into existing sockets of Pentium branded CPUs. Due to
competitive pricing AMD got up to 70% of share in PCs below Rs 70000 at one
point in 1998. Pentium III introduced SpeedStep, ability to run at a lower
clock speed & power state when idle. AMD released there K7 “Athlon”
processor.
Now remember that simple “Pentium” or “Athlon”, or from
present, Intel’s “Core i3 , i5, i7 & i9” & AMD’s “Ryzen 3, 5 & 7”
represents a series of microprocessors with different individual variants in
which core count’s or speed or generation or some technical aspect can be different.
Like Intel Core i5-8500 gets up to 4.0 GHz and belongs to 8th
Generation while Core i5-9600K is unlocked for overclocking and runs at 4.6 GHz
and belongs to 9th Generation. Similarly, AMD Ryzen 2600X runs at
4.2 GHz and belongs to 2nd generation while AMD Ryzen 5 3600X runs
at 4.4 GHz and belongs to 3rd Generation.
On 6th March 2000, AMD announced that they were shipping their
new Athlon K75 processor with 1 GHz speed and beating Intel by just two days.
Intel announced their Pentium III 1 GHz on 8th March 2000. While
Intel was late to deliver the Pentium III 1 GHz, AMD had Athlon K75 ready in
stocks.
Intel launched Pentium 4 in late 2000 with incremental
performance then Pentium 3 while AMD lower clocked Athlon could perform better
in certain applications.
In 2001, AMD announced a new branding scheme. Instead of
identifying processors by their clock speed, the AMD Athlon XP processors will
bear names like 1500+, 1600+, 1700+, 1800+, 1900+, 2000+, etc. Each higher
model number will represent a higher clock speed. With clever marketing, riding
on the name of Windows XP AMD sold more units than they could with their
previous branding scheme. AMD also launched Athlon MP, for Multi-Processor,
which can be used on Dual socket platform for power users.
In late 2002, Intel added Hyper-Threading Technology to
Pentium 4, which improves the ability of CPU doing multiple tasks at once.
After that Intel keep adding incremental performance increases to their Pentium
4 series CPUs for next 4 years as they keep casing the higher clock speeds with
their Extreme edition chips priced ludicrously.
Meanwhile, AMD launched Athlon 64, it’s first K8 generation
with AMD64, 64-bit architecture in Sep 2003 beating Intel again in 64-bit
computing. Intel had to get a license from AMD, to use their AMD64 bit architecture
in their future Pentium 4 releases, rather set the standard themselves.
In 2005, Intel launched Pentium D, Intel’s first Dual-core
offering for Desktop on April 16 while AMD then launched first dual-core
desktop CPU, Athlon 64 X2 (K9) on April 21, a week later. Both the companies
already had multiple core CPUs for Servers.
In 2006, Intel made a return to the performance dominance on
the desktop end with Core 2 lineup of Dual & Quad Core processors which
officially ended the GHz war as with the greater emphasis on efficiency a lower
clocked Core 2 Chip can easily smoke a much more power-hungry, higher clocked
Pentium 4 Chip. There were many improvements to the design and features. Intel
introduced Virtualization, the ability to run multiple operating systems with
no performance hit on a single CPU chip.
AMD offered their first “true” Quad-Core CPUs with Phenom
(K10) in 2007, as all these CPUs were on same Silicon die, while Intel’s Core 2
Quad was Multiple CPU chips brought together on another larger Chip.
Due to poor management choices took back in 1994 to get more
Fabrication units & in 2007 to Buy ATI, a dedicated graphics card company
took a toll on AMD. They got into huge debt and eventually have to sell out
their fabrication units. Currently, AMD owns no Fabrication units.
With Core i3, Core i5 & i7 released in late 2008, Turbo
Boost was added which momentary increases clock speed when workload increases
when power & thermal allows.
Phenom II X6 was first 6 core CPU launched in 2010 by AMD
and that was last of the good days for AMD.
Integrated Graphics was also added by Intel to its CPU
package in 2010. While AMD released
their CPU with integrated graphics as Accelerated Processing Unit, APU, in
2011, but it was better than Intel’s counterpart because of reduced latency
between CPU & GPU & other devices.
AMD launched FX Bulldozer processors in late 2011 &
Piledriver in late 2012 and focused on more CPU counts and higher clock speeds,
which were useless as most of the applications & games performance depends
on Single-core performance. There Single & Multi-core performance dropped
over the years as Intel kept improving their processors. There was no practical
benefit of paying AMD as Intel processors with similar price range performed
better.
As AMD started to lose it’s holding over the Market and
became uncompetitive for the better part of last decade, Intel decided that the
average user has got all the performance that they need and gave only consistent
10 to 15 % of performance increase with each generation. We got updated new I/O
system with M.2 and Thunderbolt. But not much had happened since 2010, until a couple
of years back.
AMD made a comeback with its Ryzen Series based on Zen micro-architecture
in early 2017. It was a complete re-design that marked the return of AMD to the
High-end CPU market, offering a product to compete Intel 7th Gen
CPUs at every level. Ryzen 3 for Core i3, Ryzen 5 for Core i5 & Ryzen 7 for
Core i7. It delivered 52% improvement over Bulldozer AMD core, without
increasing the power consumption. Intel was still the leader in single-core
performance but having more processing cores Ryzen offers greater
multi-threaded performance at the same price. In August 2017, AMD launched
Threadripper with 16 cores and 32 threads and kicked intel where it hurt most. AMD
targeted the High-End Desktops and Workstation market with Threadripper, which was
always dominated by Intel. Intel was caught off guard and AMD gave Intel a run
for their money.
Threadripper was built by AMD engineers in their spare time
for about a year before it they sought a green light from management. And many
years later came Threadripper. Intel already
launched Core i9, an 18 core CPU with 36 threads, in June 2017 but it failed to
impress the enthusiast as it was priced around Rs 70K to Rs 1.4 Lakh. Whereas
Threadripper prices started from Rs 42K to 70K. While Intel was still a leader
in performance but the Price-performance ratio that Threadripper gave made it the
first choice for PC builders.
We observed similar performance & price from Intel Core
iX 8th Gen and AMD Ryzen 2nd Gen based on Zen +
architecture, where intel kept its lead in performance but lost to AMD when it
comes to pricing. AMD CPU Market share grew from 11% in the third quarter of
2017 to 20.2% in the first quarter of 2018 and to 30.2% in the first quarter of
2019.
As Intel owns it’s own fabrication units and AMD don’t, AMD
has gained one advantage over Intel. While the latest 9th Generation
CPUs from Intel are still based on 14nm which they are using since late 2014, AMD doesn’t own fabrication unit and can get
it’s CPUs fabricated from different companies around the world with the latest
technology. And thus Ryzen 1st Gen was fabricated with 14 nm, 2nd
Gen with 12 nm and recently launched it’s 3rd Gen Ryzen with
industries first 7 nm on 7-7-19.
The Ryzen 3rd Generation CPUs have finally beat
up Intel with Faster and more cores. AMD Ryzen 9 3900X has 12 Core 24 threads
clocked ar 3.8 GHz & 4.6 GHz boost priced at Rs 48500 while Intel max
offering Core i9-9900K offers 8 Core 16 threads clocked at 3.6 GHz & 5.0
GHz boost at Rs 39000. Intel has also cut the price of 9900K from their launch
price of Rs 66,500 after getting so much competition from AMD.
In conclusion, the Best CPU comes out of the competition
between AMD and Intel. It’s not in favor of consumer should any of the two
companies drop out of the business. AMD keeps Intel prices in check and forces
him to pump out new things. It’s not like Intel didn’t have the minds and
technology to build new things but due to the absence of AMD from CPU
mainstream market, they stopped thinking about the next best thing. Out of this
competition, great technologies have emerged and would keep coming. Now as RED team has upped their game,
something good must come out of the BLUE team. For now, the ball is in Intel’s
court.
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