Source: Tom's Hardware UK – Keywords: Interview, AMD, Phenom
Categories: Business
Subsidies for Jobs
Since its acquisition of ATI, AMD has developed into a platform vendor. In addition to CPUs, the company also offers chipsets and graphics chips. Phenom, the company’s first quad-core CPU for the desktop segment, was finally released after many delays only recently. AMD is fighting to survive. Indeed, the situation is so dire that the German state of Saxony, where AMD’s Fab 36 is located, as well as the German government felt the company needed financial support, contributing €262 million.
Meanwhile, AMD’s main rival Intel finds itself in a completely different situation. For years now, Intel has been subsidizing the PC market with so-called advertising costs subsidies, and it’s not only the large retail chains that benefit from this support. In addition to the server space, AMD is now also concentrating on the mass market. Thee downside is that margins are the lowest in this segment. If AMD foundered, the consequences for the market would be dire. Effectively, there would be no competition without AMD, leaving us with a monopoly in the form of Intel, with everyone from OEMs to end users at the mercy of one company’s pricing politics.
Tom’s Hardware: Mister Polster, thanks to its acquisition of ATI last year, AMD is now in a position similar to that of your competition. Shouldn’t this fact allow your company to gain new customers, since you can now act as a single source for a computer’s central components? After all, AMD also produces now produces chipsets and graphics processors in addition to CPU’s. The word “platform” comes to mind.
J. Polster: We are positioned even better than the competition. Compared to AMD’s previous company structure, we now possess our own platform, which comprises the chipset and the graphics solution as well as the processor. To my knowledge, the competition does not offer graphics chips.
Tom’s Hardware: In your opinion, will AMD be able to survive without support on a national and a European level?
J. Polster: Yes, of course. No company can survive on financial benefits alone. We make very large investments that have to pay off over time. Within the entire IT sector, processor and chip makers are the ones that bear the largest risks.
Tom’s Hardware: Is life four you as a CEO becoming more uncomfortable right now?
J. Polster: Well, I’ve been with AMD for quite a while. And since you asked, it has never exactly been cozy. In our business, you pull no punches, and quarter is not given.
Tom’s Hardware: Will AMD be able to retain its independence?
J. Polster: I assume you’re referring to the 8 percent investment by Mubdala Development? This is a clear case of an investor that is expecting a certain return on its investment. To us, it’s more a sign of confidence that the company acquired shares. Also, this transaction does not constitute a majority investment or even a take-over, meaning it didn’t have to be reviewed by the US Committee on Foreign Investment.
Tom’s Hardware: Were you surprised by the performance figures of the new Phenom processor?
J. Polster: No. I was surprised by its mainstream performance. We offer a strong and solid platform, which we have been able to realize as a result of our acquisition of ATI. I will admit that we’re currently not quite at the top in the high-end market.
Tom’s Hardware: What does the new strategy for desktop CPUs look like? Will AMD be concentrating on the lower and middle price segment, in effect ceding the high-end market to the competition?
J. Polster: We are concentrating on markets where we can achieve large volumes. And that happens to be the mass market, where we can cater to the individual segments.
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Pot, meet kettle ;-P
also there no need for a comma(,) after pot; and you should have put meets instead of 'meet' your grammar is atrocious.
He has a point for a reputable site, 'Toms Hardware Guide', should use spell checker, found on the industry standard word processor.
If I had been interviewing Mr. Polster I might have inquired:
"How long can the Arabs and German government prop up AMD before the inevitable happens and your firm goes into receivership??"
OK THG might stop getting all those free samples but it would be interesting to see the look on his face!!
I did feel the interview was a bit "business as usual" but AMD is NOT like the U.S. Government and spiraling debt does not just go away... I just look at my credit cards to see that!! The more in debt they get the less they will have to spend on R&D and the more they will spiral downwards...
Bob
AMD Opteron inside!!