AMD's first quarter results are out, and the company did report a loss, but results were better than last year:
Looking at the overall quarter, AMD had revenues of $832 million, which is down a significant 19% from last year. But the good news for AMD is that their gross margin is up to 32%, an increase over last quarter and having it come back to the same level as a year ago. AMD reported an operating loss of $68 million for the quarter, which is an improvement over the $137 million loss last year.
AMD predicted 15% revenue growth for the second quarter, and its shares surged 52%:
AMD also announced an x86 and SoC licensing agreement with Tianjin Haiguang Advanced Technology Investment Co., Ltd that will make the company at least $293 million:
However what those products will be remains to be seen. While AMD is announcing the formation of the joint venture, their participation, and what they stand to gain, any actual product announcements are the responsibility of the joint venture. What AMD is emphasizing at this time is that this is a joint venture for high performance processors, that it is designed to complement AMD's existing server efforts, and that the SoCs will be leading-edge products. Just what a high performance processor is – and whether that means a multicore-heavy design or something using fewer, higher performing cores – will definitely be a burning question between now and the joint venture's own product announcements. Overall, at this point what AMD is describing does not sound like the joint venture will simply be developing cheaper, lower performing processors for the Chinese market.
AMD's Zen CPUs and Polaris GPUs will be out this year, and its K12 ARM server chips are expected next year.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Hairyfeet on Sunday April 24 2016, @12:05AM
is that once they went from MHz to cores? They quickly surpassed what the average user needs by a rather large margin. Hell even mainstream gamers can play most games at 1080P with lots of bling with a Phenom II quad or C2Q from 7 years ago, and simply adding an SSD will make most systems more than snappy enough for the majority. A perfect example is the laptop I just got finished cleaning and updating, its a C2D laptop old enough it has a WinXP sticker on it but by just going from 2Gb to 4Gb of RAM and slapping in an SSD? the customer is quite happy with it and sees no reason to replace it and Win 7 runs great on it.
That said what is gonna give AMD a hell of a boost is having a total monopoly on the console market, which will mean just about all games will be optimized for their chips, and their server deal which will give them a nice chunk of the growing Chinese market. If the Zen rumors are true and its between Sandy Bridge and Skylake while having more cores at a better price? Then the future of AMD is looking up.
ACs are never seen so don't bother. Always ready to show SJWs for the racists they are.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 24 2016, @02:18AM
Until AMD puts out a compiler optimized for their chips, they will still be at the mercy of any software compiled through Intel's compiler. I have said for years that AMD should work with the gcc compiler group.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Hairyfeet on Tuesday April 26 2016, @12:47AM
Ask and ye shall receive [amd.com], and what is more its based on GCC just as you asked for so full source is available. No cripple compiler bullshit like with Intel here, as you can check the source yourself.
ACs are never seen so don't bother. Always ready to show SJWs for the racists they are.