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AMD Businesses

AMD Reportedly Preparing Massive Layoff 286

An anonymous reader writes "AMD is preparing to lay off 20 to 30 percent of its workforce after warning of a 10 percent decline in Q3 revenues driven by the weak global economy and PC sales, according to AllThingsD's Arik Hesseldehl. The layoffs will reportedly focus on engineering and sales, and are in addition to a 10 percent headcount reduction 11 months ago. Teams of consultants from McKinsey and Boston Consulting Group are reportedly swarming headquarters to advise the CEO Rory Read, who took over from Dirk Meyer a little over a year ago; several senior executives, including the CFO, have recently departed."
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AMD Reportedly Preparing Massive Layoff

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:44AM (#41639529)
    Shut. Down. EVERYTHING.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @03:53AM (#41639971)

      Uh, yeah.

      Down 6% in Q1, down 11% in Q2, and they were expected to be down 1% in Q3... instead they were down 10%.

      Meanwhile they're not competeing in servers or smartphones, the PC market is shit and it isn't looking like it's going to get any better. Laptops are the one place they're strong, and nobody is optimistic on laptop sales.

      It's bleak over there, and believe it or not, they've got a pretty good idea of just how bleak it is.

      • Uh, yeah.

        Down 6% in Q1, down 11% in Q2, and they were expected to be down 1% in Q3... instead they were down 10%.

        Meanwhile they're not competeing in servers or smartphones, the PC market is shit and it isn't looking like it's going to get any better. Laptops are the one place they're strong, and nobody is optimistic on laptop sales.

        It's bleak over there, and believe it or not, they've got a pretty good idea of just how bleak it is.

        Damn the decimal point.

      • by lightknight ( 213164 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @05:53AM (#41640277) Homepage

        They're doing it to themselves in the PC market. They spent their resources on the Fusion crap, which while nice for low power devices, leaves the rest of us who want Phenom IIIs and Radeon 9900s out in the cold.

        I'm at a FX-8150, and I have no AMD upgrade path. I am at the zenith of their multi-core designs, save switching to an Opteron processor, and I don't want to, because the motherboards are absolute crap. The next time Intel comes out with a top of the line processor, they're likely to get my money over AMD, simply because AMD isn't putting anything out there to compete.

        • by ifiwereasculptor ( 1870574 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @08:49AM (#41640779)

          The 8150 has many problems, but that's the first time I see anyone complain about its upgrade path. The thing is the 8150 is currently the flagship. Vishera is about to be released for the same AM3+ socket, with modest improvements. If you had an i7 3770k, you'd be complaining about the same thing, unless you went LGA 2011 (then again, if you did and got a $1000 processor, you'd be in a position to make the same complaint again). In fact, you're relatively better off than an i7 2600k owner because Vishera will probably bring a bigger performance improvement over Bulldozer than Ivy brought over Sandy (which, considering how the 8150 performs, isn't exactly impressive).

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @06:10AM (#41640323)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by WOOFYGOOFY ( 1334993 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @06:55AM (#41640409)

          I don't know. I read the performance benchmarks on the 8150 before I bought it and I thought they were pretty good, except Win 7 doesn't hardware but a few 2D graphics calls, which is NOT AMD's fault and impacts some benchmarks.

          Now that I have it , I love it. I can see all 8 cores working, I can keep it all cool (75 F) no problem and the price / performance ratio is excellent, leaving out legacy PC chips whose price is near zero. The absolute performance is also pretty excellent.. for between US $100 and $500 you can get a chip that's another 30% faster from Intel, but why bother ? I'd rather put that money into an SSD and really feel some difference for my cash.

          AMD is not making its earning predictions, OK.. and their real problem is Wall Street who's punishing their stock for it. It's not like they can't make great chips at great prices.

          If Bulldozer 8150 was not literally 8x's a Phenom II in terms of power, well, it's still better by a bunch and at a great price. I love my 8150 and it's blazing fast for everything I want it to do. Highly recommended.

          The thing with Intel is, internally they're actually a worse corporation than even you described. Head hunters I have known almost immediately blanched at their name when I brought it up and said things like .. I do not recommend anyone work for Intel. I have seen the same remarks by the same professionals in print.

          Why? For generations now, it's been stocked to the gills with corporate psychopaths. Like above, so below. The level of viciousness of the politics is out of this world . For instance, there's something called "forced ranking" where 10% of their employees with the lowest scores on their reviews are automatically fired each year.

          Killing every tenth person in order to improve performance has another name- decimation.. deci-mation. It goes back to the Romans. Crassus used it to motivate the troops to capture Spartacus. The thing is even then it was considered regressive, ancient and barbaric.

          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimation_(Roman_army) [wikipedia.org]

          Obviously, people in that environment are preoccupied with one thought - "not me".

          Fucking over the other guy has evolved into a fine art there. Its totally vicious.

          Maybe AMD stumbled with 8150 in some academic sense. I think I am a demanding consumer of PCs .. I build my boxes, and I sure don't feel it. If it was less than expected, which is very different than bad, well then, obviously, onward.

          I'll never buy an Intel chip until they're the only chip maker on earth. Their business practices are as dirty and illegal as they come as the many lawsuits brought against them testify to. Is the Intel e3 1275 20% faster than an non-OC 8150 for another $150.00, almost twice the price of a 8150 ($169.00 Shell Shocker price this week) Fine. 20% for ethics and morality. It's what I give elsewhere in my life anyway.

          Oh, and this giving works out to another $150.00 bucks in my own pocket. Now that's a decision everyone involved can feel good about....

          • by MukiMuki ( 692124 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @08:04AM (#41640637)

            Am I dreaming? Is this a dream?

            The 8150 gets trounced by the overclockable i5 2500k in just about every benchmark under the sun. The 2500k is $30 more. AMD doesn't even RANK in the upper tiers of Tom's Hardware's CPU gaming hierarchy.

            To be fair, it's a card that's $30 cheaper and slightly outperforms the Sandy Bridge part in the highest levels of processing requirements (video encoding, 3D rendering, basically things that can hit 8 honest threads of use), but it gets hammered EVERYWHERE ELSE.

            That's to a system builder. On the pre-built retail desktop/laptop circuit (read: the grand majority of sales), the situation is far worse, where that single thread performance gap makes the AMD parts look really bad.

            • mmm maybe you're dreaming..I dunno....

              From passmark's score for high end CPUs:

              http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html [cpubenchmark.net]

              AMD FX-8140 Eight-Core

              score: 7,133 $169.00

              then about 20 CPUs down the ranked list :

              Intel Core i5-2500K @ 3.30GHz

              score: 6,580 $217.99*

              • Hm, so, the GP says that it slightly outperforms the i5 2500k in things that use all 8 threads, and you attempt to debunk him with... a benchmark that uses all 8 threads? In which the AMD chip beats the Intel one by a fairly minor 8%?

                Seems to me like he may have a point. What's the single-threaded performance like?

                • by WOOFYGOOFY ( 1334993 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @09:00AM (#41640819)

                  I do not think I am debunking anyone; I am conversing. When I debunk, it's much bloodier.

                  This sums up the other link:

                  http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+FX-8150+Eight-Core [cpubenchmark.net]

                  Let's say 8150 is slower , 20-30% on single threading (I am not saying it's true, I am saying people say it) than intel's chip. Is single threaded the normal use-case or is that a competitive gamer thing (obsession) where the only thing separating you from your opponent is not skill or strategy but CPU speed on a single thread.?

                  Mostly, in my life, I am using more than one thread. I am doing a number of things at once. The OS wants one (or more). My programs all want as many as I've got. Even people who aren't working with IDEs and rendering applications are still, say, listening to music and watching a video and all this kind of thing all at once.

                  Intel's chip costs more, are slower except on single threaded applications, Intel is evil. I can OC the chip easily and have a nice stable system that is just as fast for zero extra dollars on a single threaded application.

                  But the overall thing to not lose sight of is -the chips are stupifyingly fast . We can look at CPU bench marks all day but mostly they sit idle waiting for our I/O to hurry up.

                  Not arguing here. Just observing and thinking aloud.

            • Also, you might be interest in an observation... Win7 often uses all 8 cores. The chip comes with a utility from AMD that let's you track core activity. My IDE definitely uses all 8 to good effect and windows Explorer (file system) also uses all 8 on a regular basis. My MB has a slick 'n easy OC utility, but I don't use it .. like I said, this thing is way fast enough for me programming, using drawing programs .. moving files ...you know work stuff... .
          • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @08:53AM (#41640793)

            Current employee here (I'm not an official spokesperson, this may not be the corporate line, yadda yadda) let me clarify some stuff.

            The thing with Intel is, internally they're actually a worse corporation than even you described. Head hunters I have known almost immediately blanched at their name when I brought it up and said things like .. I do not recommend anyone work for Intel. I have seen the same remarks by the same professionals in print.

            Why? For generations now, it's been stocked to the gills with corporate psychopaths. Like above, so below. The level of viciousness of the politics is out of this world . For instance, there's something called "forced ranking" where 10% of their employees with the lowest scores on their reviews are automatically fired each year.

            Killing every tenth person in order to improve performance has another name- decimation.. deci-mation. It goes back to the Romans. Crassus used it to motivate the troops to capture Spartacus

            Yes, we have problems with people who exist only to further their own career, or that somehow subsist by controlling information such that no one else can get it. The information hoarders in particular are annoying because you have to have their blessing to get stuff done. I believe that any organization with >80k employees is going to have this somewhere in their organization

            We have some psychotic managers that act like 2 year olds. They put unattainable deadlines on the board and they hoard resources to do their job. I hear that this was the norm in the previous CEO's days because of the 10% layoffs of which you speak. The way it worked wasn't 10% of the worst employees, but rather entire departments would be cut for failing to meet the numbers. While I have a good manager, and several other people I know have, you may end up having one of these ancient trolls that still exist within the system. The perception is that Paul is trying to clean this stuff up, and the review process has been restructured to try to weed this out.

            Intel does have a bad reputation in some of the local communities for various reasons. I hear stories of construction projects that never started, never finished, or sat around forever. I'm sure you're not wrong about your headhunter stories.

            For reviews, employees are ranked in a scale against each other. You're put into one of 5 buckets, and you want to try to be in the top 3. The relative performance of each bucket is determined by the performance of you and your peers (i.e. you have to be better than your peers. If they all suck, the bar is pretty low, but if they're geniuses, you better work your ass off.). I don't think there's a set percentage for each bucket. If there's not enough people to compare you to at your site, you're compared to similar people in your hemisphere. This isn't all of it, like there's some more paperwork involved in getting feedback from coworkers and such, but at the end of the day you're in one of the buckets.

            • We just had the discussion here on /. about Forced Ranking a month or so ago. I'm too lazy to look up that article but I will link this:

              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitality_curve [wikipedia.org]

              What I got from the, rather extensive thread, was that Forced Ranking has the potential to be a good tool for weeding out people that might have gotten/are lazy in an organization. However if it is constantly used, or badly implemented (which it can very easily be), it overall will create a very bad atmosphere.

          • by tomhath ( 637240 )

            For instance, there's something called "forced ranking" where 10% of their employees with the lowest scores on their reviews are automatically fired each year.

            That was considered genius when Jack Welch instituted it during his years as CEO of General Electric.

          • I think both you and the parent make some good points. For you, I'd say the 8150 is definitely problematic when it comes to power consumption. I like AMD, but even with the FX-6100 at the same price point as an i3-2120, I see no reason to upgrade my Athlon II X3. It would run slightly hotter, spend slightly more power and perform about the same in most productivity workloads, since they are limited by my HDD, and perform about the same or quite worse in games. So that I'd call a complete failure on AMD's pa

      • by mikael ( 484 )

        I've got a seven-year-old laptop - it's good enough to surf the web (even Google streetview) and watch HD videos. I was planning to buy a new laptop, but needed a new phone. A latest-model smartphone can do all the internet related things a laptop can do, as well as 3D graphics with texture-mapping (still blows me away - what used to be the exclusive domain of a SGI Extreme is now done by a mobile phone).

    • Shut. Down. EVERYTHING.

      If they lay off engineering and sales, they may just as well do that.

      Engineering: create product to sell

      Sales: sell product engineering creates

      How about axing middle management instead?

  • by KingSkippus ( 799657 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:46AM (#41639539) Homepage Journal

    How about laying off the consultants instead?

    I'm serious. Consultants are nothing but leeches, and they will almost always give you advice on how you can make your company just like every other company in your industry. I yearn for the days when companies looked for ways to set themselves apart, to stand out from the crowd, instead of trying desperately to follow lockstep in line with everyone else. Other companies have massive layoffs, so hey, let's do it too!

    Especially the engineers. You need engineers to keep doing what you do. This really bodes badly for AMD, because without engineers, they're basically slitting their company's wrists. I'll bet dollars to doughnuts that they're getting rid of the ones with seniority at that to try to save a few bucks on salary while simultaneously bleeding themselves out of knowledge and experience.

    But hey, it's their funeral, so whatever gets the stock price up a little bit so that they can cash out their options, right?

    • by mewsenews ( 251487 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:57AM (#41639589) Homepage

      Especially the engineers. You need engineers to keep doing what you do. This really bodes badly for AMD, because without engineers, they're basically slitting their company's wrists. I'll bet dollars to doughnuts that they're getting rid of the ones with seniority at that to try to save a few bucks on salary while simultaneously bleeding themselves out of knowledge and experience.

      Early retirement - the perfect recipe for short term savings and long term loss of institutional knowledge!!

      • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @02:09AM (#41639631)

        Early retirement - the perfect recipe for short term savings and long term loss of institutional knowledge!!

        But, but, its all documented! So even kids right out of school can replace the laid-off engineers when demand comes back.

        Sheesh! It's not like they're VP's or something equally irreplaceable!

        3. Profit!

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @02:27AM (#41639683)
      yes, there are overpaid asshats out there. But most consultants are really just employees without health benefits and unemployement insurance. If you see a company with a lot of consultants that's why. You can fire them at the drop of a hat at no cost. It's a sign of the modern economy, and one of the reasons my political views swing so far left.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        So far center. The world just moved right.

      • I agree. Well said.

      • by KingSkippus ( 799657 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @02:59AM (#41639795) Homepage Journal

        I don't think the kind of consultant you are talking about and the kind of consultant referred to in the summary are the same kind of consultant:

        Teams of consultants from McKinsey and Boston Consulting Group are reportedly swarming headquarters to advise the CEO Rory Read...

        These are the kind of consultants that tell the CEO that he doesn't need those expensive engineers with health benefits and unemployment insurance. For a reasonable fee (that will end up costing AMD even more money in the long run), these consultants will be able to bring in some of their company's other consultants and not have to worry about silly little things like benefits, thus reducing costs. For the next financial quarter or two--certainly long enough to cash out your stock options and find another job at a company that will pay you more because of your success here--it's win-win!

    • Losing Engineers and the CFO is already gone...... Bad news. Honestly, if I saw our CFO selling/shorting stock and/or leaving then I'd really panic, they always seem to know what's going on, and when to take their golden parachute!
    • Consultants are nothing but leeches, and they will almost always give you advice on how you can make your company just like every other company in your industry. I yearn for the days when companies looked for ways to set themselves apart, to stand out from the crowd, instead of trying desperately to follow lockstep in line with everyone else. Other companies have massive layoffs, so hey, let's do it too!

      Thank you for articulating that though for me so clearly. I've always hated consultants, and their stupid, homogenizing action.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @03:39AM (#41639931)

      I'll bet dollars to doughnuts that they're getting rid of the ones with seniority at that to try to save a few bucks on salary while simultaneously bleeding themselves out of knowledge and experience.

      I'll take that bet. I'm pretty sure they are doing the opposite: laying off all the junior engineers, support engineers, and the sales and marketing force in preparation for having some larger company (with their own army of overseas junior engineer worker-bees) take over. The consultants are there to negociate the headcount on behalf of the purchasers, they have nothing to do with the current management or the current product line. The consultants are like the home inspectors that a you hire when you are buying a house...

      My guess is that larger company is probably one of Samsung or Qualcomm, secondary guess would be Apple or Microsoft. Both Samsung and Qualcomm have been hiring AMD (ex ATI) folks left and right for the last few months and if they can pick up AMD for a song, they will probably do it. What any of these companies don't need are a bunch of 2-5 year engineers, supporting engineers, nor sales or marketing employees as a purchasing company, they are likely to just abandon all the current (and planned) product lines. The only thing the want is the core engineering assets (GPU designers and high-speed CPU physical design group) and the patents to deploy in their own product lines. The consultants job is to figure out who those folks are. All the bulldozer architects and APU stuff will probably go in the dumper as soon as the deal is closed.

      Put a fork in it. AMD as we know it is probably done.

      • by Konster ( 252488 )

        Except that anyone buying AMD won't be getting any of their x86 stuff because there's a lot of cross-licensing with Intel that won't get transferred on a sale.

        Anyone who buys AMD at this point will only be getting their GPU division, unless by some miracle the purchaser works out a licensing deal with Intel for x86 stuff. Fat chance.

    • Third level education typically does not specialise in, and rarely even features, independent thought beyond certain strict boundaries. Essentially its a brain factory. So as the first generation of entrepreneurs moves on and retires, the people who take their place are Properly Qualified and Of The Highest Standard, but they don't know how an entrepreneur thinks, don't like taking risks, and got where they are by doing things according to the book. Consultants don't force CEOs to obey them, the CEOs always

    • Exactly. They should be doubling-down on a new high-end processor design, not shedding employees that know their shit. They appear to be making the same mistakes that HP and friends have made in times past ("Hey, do we even need a PC division?"), which usually happens when you have the wrong people in high places. The company becomes a pump-and-dump, with each new CEO talking about turning things around and not succeeding, while accepting golden parachutes, with slight stock increases followed by larger and

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by tsotha ( 720379 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:50AM (#41639563)
    They hired the two Bobs.
  • by Phelan ( 30485 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:50AM (#41639565)

    What do you do when you are trying to maximize short term shareholder value in a distribution based business?
    Cut R&D, get rid of sales staff for new markets...
    Hit your profit goal, sell stock, get bonus by the time the company goes under you're long gone with your friends at McKinney.
    Usually it takes 3 years in hardware for a R&D cut to show in sales figures... Mark it down also mark down the current CEO will be chilling on his new island by that time

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      AMD is in the mess they're in right now because their previous R&D didn't pan out. Bulldozer turned out to be a failure and AMD's competitor to the Atom, while better in most regards, is in a low margin segment of the market so even if they did take most of the sales there, it wouldn't help their profit all that much.

      What the hell are they supposed to do at this point? The only part of the company that's doing well by any standards is their graphics division (formerly ATI) but that's not going to be eno

  • Servers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by corychristison ( 951993 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:52AM (#41639571)

    And virtually all through Q3 I've been trying to get my hands on 4 Opterons 16-core (model 6272 I think).

    Only last week Newegg finally received some of the new revised version but were out of stock for months.

    Either they overcommitted to OEMs or they simply did not provision enough for people like me. If they were quicker to get the revision out I am sure they could have made up for that 10% drop.

    I do understand this article is referring to desktop CPU's but the Opterons are still a part of their bottom line.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Either they overcommitted to OEMs or they simply did not provision enough for people like me. If they were quicker to get the revision out I am sure they could have made up for that 10% drop.
      I am an engineer at Intel. I work on core design and engineering of Intel's latest-and-greatest products, and have seen extensive internal reverse engineering work done on AMD products.

      It's incredibly hard to just produce "more" of a new product when the process engineering side is not functioning stably, as we believe

    • Odd. We've been rolling out dual and quad Opteron 6272 servers steadily for the past six months. No problems with supply, and they mop the floor with Intel systems on price/performance.

      But we don't buy from Newegg; we go through three vendors Supermicro recommended.

      • I should note I live in Canada. While that doesn't mean I cannot order from US shops, I do have a tendency to only search businesses that have some form of operation within Canada to avoid duties/import fee's.

        I did find the odd Canadian online shop that only had 1 or two in stock (or on order). My primary "goto" is NCIX [ncix.com]. They still do not have 12/16 core in stock.

        I am not in any immediate hurry to get them, it's actually worked out to my benefit by holding off as now I have access to the latest revision. :-

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Have a foot in both x86 and ARM.

    • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @05:10AM (#41640157)

      Have a foot in both x86 and ARM.

      You arent very well informed. AMD doesn't fab processors, so cannot possibly fab ARM processors. AMD is like ARM now and only designs processors, but unlike ARM they do not license the design out (probably they cannot, thanks to IP deals with Intel.)

      AMD spun off their fab business in 2009, which is named Global Foundries, divesting their last shares in the company earlier this year.

  • Pussies (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tsotha ( 720379 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @01:56AM (#41639583)
    Am I the only one who thinks management teams that bring in consultants to do mass layoffs are pussies? If you fuck up a company so badly 30% of the employees have to go, the very least you can do is not hide in the proverbial closet until it's over.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Management is probably not that good at determining who should go - especially as in this case it it not so much down to the individuals talent and contribution, rather it is more about his mission and his section and division's mission Managers don't normally do that - they are hired and trained to make tactical decisions.
      Also add in the fact managers (at least the middle management) are equally eligible for layoff but are unlikely to recommend their own demise.
      I don't see how anyone other than an externa

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      What makes you think that if they were too incompetent to select the right people for the job and organize things properly,
      that now they would be able to select which ones are the right people to get fired and how to organize that properly.

      I have seen this exact scenario many, many times before.
      The problem here is, that management itself is exempt from the firing.
      And as long as that won't change, AMD is in for a long, seemingly endless Bataan death march to bankruptcy.
      Only accelerated by Intel kicking them

    • the top guys aren't hiding. They're you're ruling class. Multi-multi millionaires. The don't suffer consequences anymore than the kings of old. Sure, every now and then one of them pisses off the rest and gets thrown to the wolves (Bernie Madoff). But for the most part you don't spill noble blood.
    • Am I the only one who thinks management teams that bring in consultants to do mass layoffs are pussies? If you fuck up a company so badly 30% of the employees have to go, the very least you can do is not hide in the proverbial closet until it's over.

      One could argue that senior management doesn't have enough time in their day to organize and manage a mass layoff process at a company of this size.

  • Bizarro World (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bignetbuy ( 1105123 ) <dm AT area2408 DOT com> on Saturday October 13, 2012 @02:00AM (#41639597) Journal

    So, profits are down and the answer is to lay off the people who bring in the profits? Or the people who build the products that make the money?

    How is this right in any sense of the word? Instead of spot layoffs to raise the stock price a few cents, AMD should be focusing on beating the tar out of Intel, Nvidia, and ARM manufacturers. Or wondering why AMD doesn't have a chip that can drive a tablet?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 13, 2012 @02:06AM (#41639627)

    Intel will just give them a few billion. Cheaper than to deal with antitrust issues if AMD goes bankrupt.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I can just imagine this phone call. "Hey Rory, it's Paul. Hey look, we were clearing up some stuff and found this old court case with you that's not settled yet. As you know, our graphics is improving, but still widely not well regarded, and I know we've got some process stuff you'd like to use. I was thinking we could roll up a settlement in the usual cross-license deal to make the NDA stick and throw in a little money to take the sting away... say, four billion? .... Yes, cash. .... Great. I'll have S
  • I'm really interested to know how this affects Intel. If their main competitor is (theoretically) starting to die off as a company, that would naturally push them towards a monopolistic state, simply because so few companies *can* compete any more. Building next gen chips seems like it's an awfully high barrier to entry for a company just getting started. With the prospect of becoming an actual monopoly it seems like Intel would really want AMD to continue thriving in just enough capacity to keep sharpening
    • by slew ( 2918 )

      I doubt there's much Intel could do to keep AMD alive at this point (even if they wanted to).

      If they had a fab perhaps Intel could allow them to second source parts (but they spun out Global Foundaries)
      If they had something Intel didn't have they could license it (like a mobile GPU which they sold to Qualcomm)
      If they had an ARM licence (which they don't and Intel sold theirs to Marvell, so they probably don't really want it anyhow)
      If they just gave them money (they already gave them $1B, about 50% of their

      • Intel was caught looking at their shoes the last time AMD was pushed to the brink and spun off their fabs to Global Foundries. I really don't think Intel saw that coming. If AMD starts selling assets again, it's probably going to be the Chinese government stepping in. They wouldn't need Longsoon anymore. That could really hurt Intel, both in terms of the Asian market and the unlimited financial resources that a reorganized AMD would have.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday October 13, 2012 @03:18AM (#41639873)

    These people focus on short-term optimizations. AMD needs a strategic fix, not a tactical one. A tactical one will only make matters worse.

  • I left AMD a couple years ago to pursue other interests before all this layoff crap was happening and the mood was pretty good. There was a new team that was started in Russia, but the teams were assured that "this doesn't effect the jobs in Canada, as these are NEW jobs and the team in Canada was growing as well!". Many people bought into this - I didn't. Went back for a visit a few months later, and found out that they had opened two new offices - in Europe and Asia I think. The mood was a bit grimmer - n
    • /Looks at Russia. /Looks at USA/Canada

      You think the difference is high taxes and supporting the general society? Russia's economy is in the toilet, has horrible institutionalized corruption, crushing poverty.... and you think it's because El Norte pays too much taxes?

      Don't worry, the same thing that messed up the soviet union is going to mess us up. They tried to buiild a military they couldn't afford to keep up with the Joneses(USA). Massive corruption leached money out of the system and into the pocke

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