Though AMD's server sector is raking in the money ...
Intel had a choice: prioritize server shipments or desktop PC processors, after manufacturing issues caused shortages. Intel ...
Q4 figures reveal shifting market share across PCs and cloud infrastructure Intel continues to lose market share to rival AMD across server, desktop, and mobile processors, and this has been ...
Only six months ago, AMD (and Intel) was touting its "AI PC" laptop processors with the company's second-gen neural processing unit for low-power AI acceleration -- and they're already so last year.
Intel’s decision to prioritize server CPU production in the face of supply constraints helped AMD achieve an all-time high in ...
Once upon a time, the idea of gaming on a machine without a discrete graphics card was basically a laughable proposition, at least if you were trying to play anything other than decades-old titles or ...
As AMD gains market share in desktops, laptops, and servers, its overall x86 share hits all time high at 29.2%.
AMD saw some impressive gains in multiple segments, including a record-high market share on the desktop and record revenue share in server CPUs.
New CPU shipment estimates from Mercury Research suggest AMD is continuing to narrow Intel’s long-held lead across the x86 ...
AMD also didn’t announce a new chip for handheld gaming PCs, no successor to the Z2 and Z2 Extreme it introduced a year ago, ...