Those more attentive to the tech industry segment have already noticed that AMD has become a much stronger company after the leadership was taken by the current CEO, Lisa Su.
The Taiwanese brand has gradually gained a more comfortable place in several segments, especially in the CPU sector. According to recent data, AMD already has 16% of the market for processors for data centers.
Intel still leads the processor market. However, recently, Pat Gensinger's brand announced some strategic measures to become stronger against rival AMD. Specifically, Intel decided reduce the price of your server chips. But everything indicates that, even so, the Taiwanese company has a lot of struggle to give to the competition.
AMD already has 16% of the server CPU market
According to a report recently carried out by Omdia, one of several technology market analysis companies, and released by Business Wire, AMD managed to reach 16% of its share in the segment of processors for data centers. This figure represents a record for Lisa Su's company.
It was in 2017 that the company launched its range of Epyc CPUs, aimed at servers, high-performance computing (HPC) and other business purposes.
Read too: Netflix uses servers with AMD Epyc Rome CPUs and achieves 400 Gb/s bandwidth
AMD intelligently took advantage of Intel's loss of strength in this market. To secure more customers, the Taiwanese company increased its cloud services, offered better products and thus assumed a greater presence in this sector.
In short, AMD is gradually approaching the competition in a safe and confident way. As for its data center processors, the next generation, code-named Genoa, should arrive as early as 2022 with a 96-core and 192-thread CPU.
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