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  • (mysterious music)

  • - [Presenter] Computer chips probably make you

  • think of this.

  • ("Intel theme music")

  • Since it was founded in 1968,

  • Intel has dominated the chip market.

  • - [Voiceover] This symbol outside

  • means you have the standard inside.

  • - [Presenter] It was the world's largest chip maker

  • by revenue for 25 years

  • and it's still America's largest chip company by sales

  • - [Voiceover] Intel.

  • - [Presenter] But then came AMD.

  • In 2022, the longtime rival took Intel's top spot

  • in market value, breaching a market cap of over 200 billion.

  • - It was the first time that ever happened.

  • - [Presenter] In part, this recent achievement

  • can be traced back to one risky

  • and expensive decision AMD made that changed the game

  • not just for the company, but for computing.

  • So how did AMD finally catch up to Intel?

  • July, 1968, Silicon Valley.

  • A small group of engineers founded Intel,

  • a startup dedicated to chips,

  • which are essentially the brains of a computer.

  • Intel prioritized development from the start

  • and didn't report any sales in the first six months.

  • Meanwhile, 20 minutes down the road and 10 months later,

  • a former coworker of those engineers founded AMD

  • or Advanced Micro Devices.

  • AMD was making chips that Intel had already made,

  • focusing more on keeping up than getting ahead.

  • Then in 1970, Intel came out with this,

  • the first semiconductor memory chip.

  • A year later, it was the best selling semiconductor device

  • in the world.

  • AMD's hardware didn't sell the same way.

  • - AMD really came up as kind of an Intel copycat,

  • company that was making alternatives to Intel chips

  • so like maybe a little bit cheaper and things like that.

  • So they kind of came in second in a lot of ways to Intel,

  • especially when it came to CPUs and the rise of CPUs.

  • - [Presenter] CPUs are central processing units,

  • basically chips that solve problems.

  • Here's how they work.

  • First, the base, a flat piece of silicon.

  • Silicon is a semiconductor, which means it's conductive

  • but can be made more conductive by adding other materials

  • like phosphorus or boron.

  • On that silicon piece, there's a pathway of transistors

  • which turn currents on and off.

  • These strings of electronic blips read as one or zero

  • and come together as binary information.

  • That information goes through this, a core.

  • In simplified terms, the core takes in a problem

  • and shoots out an answer.

  • Those answers help determine how to respond to requests

  • like opening a webpage or sending an email.

  • If the chip is the main brain,

  • the core is like a tiny second brain.

  • By 1971, Intel released the first

  • programmable microprocessor, another success.

  • The company churned out new chip after new chip,

  • creating industry standard after industry standard.

  • - Back in those times, it was able to put together

  • this combination of marketing itself well

  • and creating some of the world's best technology

  • to become the powerhouse that it became back then.

  • - [Presenter] By 1997, Intel chips served as the brains

  • of 84% of the world's computers.

  • It had 10 times AMD sales,

  • and six times its manufacturing capacity.

  • - [Voiceover] Now anyone can have

  • all the brain power they want.

  • Just look for a PC with an Intel processor inside.

  • - [Presenter] Going into the new millennium,

  • AMD's market value lagged behind Intel's.

  • Fast forward to late 2014, when the company tasked new CEO

  • Lisa Su with turning things around.

  • Before Su's tenure, the company had fought off rumors

  • it would be sold and laid off workers.

  • So behind the scenes, Su began working on a new innovation.

  • - I hope you guys have your money ready.

  • We've made plenty of processors.

  • - AMD released a new design for their high performance chips

  • that beat many of Intel's benchmarks.

  • First, the transistors were organized in a new way

  • on the chips called Zen Architecture.

  • At the same time, AMD rethought

  • how chips themselves were made.

  • Intel had been focusing on making a single CPU

  • answer questions really, really fast.

  • AMD decided that for some of its chips,

  • it moved to chiplets.

  • Instead of having one big silicon chip,

  • there were multiple small chips in the same package,

  • connected together and acting like one CPU.

  • - That strategy conferred some key advantages

  • in terms of power consumption, in terms of cost,

  • but still performed very well against Intel's products.

  • - This chip redesign was the pivotal factor

  • that gave AMD an edge.

  • - And that really helped AMD return

  • to more of a leadership position in the market

  • when these products launched in 2017

  • - Experts said that comparable AMD CPUs

  • were less expensive and faster than Intel's.

  • - Our competition is priced at a thousand dollars.

  • AMD Ryzen 499!

  • - By mid 2018, its market cap had shot up

  • to over 30 billion dollars.

  • Almost exactly five years after the release

  • of Ryzen in 2022, AMD passed Intel in market cap

  • for the first time, but it didn't hold that spot for long.

  • Still...

  • - It reflects the investor sentiment

  • about the future of the two companies.

  • Clearly, investors see a lot of positive things

  • in the future for AMD, given its share gains against Intel

  • - [Presenter] Then the sales of PCs,

  • which drive CPU usage, slumped.

  • Shipments in the second quarter of 2022

  • dropped in the steepest decline in nine years.

  • In July, Intel posted its biggest revenue drop

  • in more than a decade.

  • A month later, AMD surpassed Intel again in market value.

  • - Intel's trying to aggressively correct

  • its technology path and become, you know,

  • the undisputed leader again in chip manufacturing.

  • - [Presenter] While AMD was also hit by market forces,

  • its revenue increased by 14%.

  • - AMD is a little bit more flexible in a sense

  • than Intel because it's smaller

  • and AMD does not have any manufacturing facilities

  • like Intel does.

  • That kind of gives AMD some flexibility to adapt

  • to this environment, perhaps without the kinds of cuts

  • that Intel is making.

  • - But AMD may face even more challenges

  • after the US government imposed export restrictions

  • on some chips in manufacturing equipment.

  • CEO Lisa Sue said-

  • - [Su] It is minimal impact on our revenue in the near term.

  • - [Presenter] Intel is building new factories called fabs

  • to help keep as much of production as possible in the US.

  • - Where the oil reserves are defined geopolitics

  • for the last five decades,

  • where the fabs are for the next five decades

  • is more important.

  • - [Presenter] Whether AMD will continue to hold

  • its own against Intel will depend on

  • how well its innovations have laid

  • the groundwork for the way forward.

  • (mysterious music)

(mysterious music)

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AMD花了53年擊敗 Intel 他是怎麼做到的?(It Took 53 Years for AMD to Beat Intel. Here's Why. | WSJ)

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    Kelly Lin 發佈於 2023 年 05 月 09 日
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