So your user name should really be "bob-comber", no?It would! I work for a wool combing plant.
I doubt that Apple is interested in entering into the server hardware market again, but there are signs that it is reducing its use of external cloud services in its own data centres: https://www.imore.com/apples-recent-cloud-hires-hint-major-investment-infrastructure. Apple was reportedly paying AWS $30million per month in 2019.I'm convinced Apple could make an offering in the cloud (beyond iCloud) - where they can leverage their own Arm hardware to offer services akin to AWS/GCP/Azure. Similar but different.
On one level, they'd could let iCloud use that stack to 'eat their own dog food'. Apple's need of cloud services are only going to grow in the coming years.
On another level, they'd also be able to cultivate providing better support for back end services for iOS/iPadOS apps. (Xcode Cloud V2?)
Those are markets with willing customers in which they can dip their toes. It's not like the 'cloud' business is slowing down. Amazon touts the energy efficiency of their Graviton (Arm) offerings. If I were in Apple, I'd take that as a challenge.
The fellow who hosts the video, which is where that quote came from, had very accurate details about Big Navi long before it was released. After RDNA2 was announced, he revealed that source to be Rick Bergman, AMD's VP of Computing and Graphics group. Tom has high-level sources throughout the industry, Apple being the one exception."My brothers wife's friends sister who knows someone who works at Intel....said Intel is more scared of Apple than AMD"
Wait - rick is back at AMD?! I worked with him at two other companies (well, AMD was one of them. Other was Exponential) and didn’t realize he wasn’t at Synaptics anymore. Cool.When I posted this I was concerned that it wouldn't get much traffic. That was an unnecessary concern. Let me first say that I appreciate everyone who has contributed to this thread, it has generated a good discussion, regardless of your stance on the issue, and I thank you all for that.
The reason that I mentioned Ed Coligan is for the same reason that @cmaier points out about the current situation. Back when Palm was pushing their version of the smartphone, the market was composed of Palm and some generic PDAs running Windows Mobile with cellular capability bolted on. The iPhone changed everything. Everyone immediately followed Apple's lead and now Windows Mobile is defunct and Palm no longer exists. (And I say this as someone who very much liked Palm and owned many Palm OS PDAs.)
We could be seeing something similar happening in the CPU space. Intel isn't concerned that Apple will suddenly abandon veritcal integration and start selling Apple Silicon to other PC makers. They are concerned that Apple will develop high-performance ARM processors, which will show the other PC manufactures that they don't need Intel. I'm not saying that this will definitely happen, just that Intel should be concerned that it could happen.
The fellow who hosts the video, which is where that quote came from, had very accurate details about Big Navi long before it was released. After RDNA2 was announced, he revealed that source to be Rick Bergman, AMD's VP of Computing and Graphics group. Tom has high-level sources throughout the industry, Apple being the one exception.
Regardless, for its part, perhaps Intel will react with agility. However, the Romans didn't see the Visigoths coming until they were at the city gates. (And if Apple are the Visigoths, then I suppose AMD would be the Vandals.)
But they are taking baby steps in that direction.Apple could do what Amazon did and generate their own ARM-based servers for internal use, similar to AWS Graviton 2, but I don't think Apple has plans to become an IaaS or PasS provider and compete against AWS, Microsoft & Google in the cloud infrastructure space. It's a very competitive market and latecomers (e.g. Oracle) have a hard job to get any market penetration with enterprise customers.
You can though, for exactly $400 USD.
No. But that is better than some mispronunciations!So your user name should really be "bob-comber", no?
It's $400.00 USD if you order them when you order them with your new Mac Pro.
Intel worried about profit margins is a good thing as far as I'm concerned, it tends to drive innovation
FWIW, while Intel's share prices haven't grown like AMD's, the market isn't exactly shorting Intel either:
INTEL
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AMD
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Apple can take up 20% of the market and eat up 80% of the industry's profits like they do in mobile.Regardless of any of this, I doubt that Apple is a significant threat to Intel or AMD. They are not interested in selling their chips to a third party, they do not target the server market, and they only offer products in the premium consumer segment. I think that long-term Apple might dominate the premium consumer as well as the mobile workstation and desktop video editing market, but I doubt they will surpass 15-20% of the PC market share.
Yup, he's even got his own fancy page on AMD's executive team list.Wait - rick is back at AMD?! I worked with him at two other companies (well, AMD was one of them. Other was Exponential) and didn’t realize he wasn’t at Synaptics anymore. Cool.
Yup, he's even got his own fancy page on AMD's executive team list.
Bergman Bio
He's also been doing a lot of the product introductions during AMD keynotes. I obviously have no inside information, but the impression I get is that he seems to be second only to Lisa Su in the company's hierarchy.
Well… here you go. ?I won't be surprised if soon we get a full fledged Photoshop online,
The downside presumably being that will require a massive upgrade to internet infrastructure to maintain the speeds/ bandwidth necessary? Particularly outside of the usual areas that already have current or next gen fibre and 5G connections available.It's not Photoshop, but it's pretty good. Imagine in a few years when even software like Final Cut Pro are fully online and all you need as a computer is anything that can run a browser. Even highly demanding video games can be played on the browser even today with projects like Stadia and GeForce Now. In a few years, who will feel the need to buy Intel's Core i13 or whatever?