The 2014 McClean Report, from IC Insights, shows a ranking of the 2013
top-10 microprocessor suppliers (as well as the leading foundry, DRAM,
flash, DSP, MCU, standard cell, analog, and PLD suppliers). A subset of
this ranking listing the top 5 MPU suppliers is depicted in Figure 1.
The $58.6bn (USD) microprocessor market was the largest single
semiconductor product category in 2013, accounting for 22% of total IC
sales.
In 2013, tablet microprocessors represented
nearly 6% of worldwide MPU sales compared to 4% in the previous year,
while cellphone application processors accounted for 25% of the revenue
total, up from 22% in 2012. MPUs used in PCs, server computers, and
embedded-processing applications slid to 69% of total microprocessor
sales in 2013 compared to 74% in 2012.
Among the MPU leaders, only top-ranked Intel and fourth-place
Advanced Micro Devices supply central processors built with the x86
microarchitecture for standard personal computers that run Windows
operating system software from Microsoft. The remaining top suppliers
develop and sell mobile MPUs built with RISC processor cores licensed
from ARM in the U.K. Since the end of the last decade, Intel has also
been trying to compete with ARM processors and expand into smartphones
and tablets by offering low-cost, low-power mobile MPUs in its x86-based
Atom series. Meanwhile, AMD has licensed ARM cores for new 64-bit
server processors, which are expected to become available in 2014.
Intel continues to dominate the microprocessor business, accounting for nearly two-thirds of the market’s total sales in 2013, but the company’s huge MPU marketshare is being chipped away by strong growth in ARM-built processors for smartphones, tablets, and new high-density microservers, which can lower cost in data centers for high-volume Internet traffic and cloud-computing services. With shipments of standard PCs waning, Intel’s total MPU sales fell by about 2% to $36.3bn (USD) in 2013, following a 1% decline in 2012, primarily due to slowing demand for x86 central processing units (CPUs) in personal computers. Standard notebook PCs continue to face stiff competition from tablets sold by Apple, Samsung, Amazon, and more than a dozen other suppliers worldwide. New smartphones, which are often built with similar ARM processors as tablets, also continue to infiltrate more PC applications.
AMD’s x86 microprocessor sales have been hit harder by the slowdown in notebook and desktop PCs, resulting in its total MPU revenues plunging 21% in both 2012 and 2013. AMD’s 2013 microprocessor sales (excluding stand-alone graphics processors) fell to $2.8bn (USD), which represented 4.8% of total MPU sales last year compared to its previous marketshares of 6.4% in 2012 and 8.2% in 2011. AMD remained in fourth place among MPU suppliers in 2013.
The two x86 rivals are now scrambling with different strategies to reverse their slumping fortunes in microprocessors. AMD has joined the ARM camp, preparing 2014 introductions of new 28nm Opteron A1100 server processors (with up to eight ARM-based 64-bit CPU cores) while the company also aims graphics-enhanced x86 designs at tablets and notebook PCs. AMD says it will be the only microprocessor maker to offer both ARM and x86 solutions.
Meanwhile, Intel is accelerating its push to diversify its x86 MPUs and make new processors more competitive with ARM-based solutions in a wide range of platforms - from smartphones and tablets to convertible notebooks that can function like tablets, high-density microservers, new wearable systems, and embedded “Internet of Things” (IoT) applications. Intel continues to emphasize its manufacturing leadership, preparing to introduce the first 14nm-fabricated processors (code-named “Broadwell”) in 2H14. With its newest 22nm Atom SoC processors and existing 22nm Core x86 flagship microprocessors, Intel aims to ship 40 million tablet MPUs in 2014, up fourfold from 2013.
The April Update to The 2014 McClean Report provides final sales results and additional details of the latest MPU trends at Qualcomm, Samsung, and other top-10 MPU suppliers.
Intel continues to dominate the microprocessor business, accounting for nearly two-thirds of the market’s total sales in 2013, but the company’s huge MPU marketshare is being chipped away by strong growth in ARM-built processors for smartphones, tablets, and new high-density microservers, which can lower cost in data centers for high-volume Internet traffic and cloud-computing services. With shipments of standard PCs waning, Intel’s total MPU sales fell by about 2% to $36.3bn (USD) in 2013, following a 1% decline in 2012, primarily due to slowing demand for x86 central processing units (CPUs) in personal computers. Standard notebook PCs continue to face stiff competition from tablets sold by Apple, Samsung, Amazon, and more than a dozen other suppliers worldwide. New smartphones, which are often built with similar ARM processors as tablets, also continue to infiltrate more PC applications.
AMD’s x86 microprocessor sales have been hit harder by the slowdown in notebook and desktop PCs, resulting in its total MPU revenues plunging 21% in both 2012 and 2013. AMD’s 2013 microprocessor sales (excluding stand-alone graphics processors) fell to $2.8bn (USD), which represented 4.8% of total MPU sales last year compared to its previous marketshares of 6.4% in 2012 and 8.2% in 2011. AMD remained in fourth place among MPU suppliers in 2013.
The two x86 rivals are now scrambling with different strategies to reverse their slumping fortunes in microprocessors. AMD has joined the ARM camp, preparing 2014 introductions of new 28nm Opteron A1100 server processors (with up to eight ARM-based 64-bit CPU cores) while the company also aims graphics-enhanced x86 designs at tablets and notebook PCs. AMD says it will be the only microprocessor maker to offer both ARM and x86 solutions.
Meanwhile, Intel is accelerating its push to diversify its x86 MPUs and make new processors more competitive with ARM-based solutions in a wide range of platforms - from smartphones and tablets to convertible notebooks that can function like tablets, high-density microservers, new wearable systems, and embedded “Internet of Things” (IoT) applications. Intel continues to emphasize its manufacturing leadership, preparing to introduce the first 14nm-fabricated processors (code-named “Broadwell”) in 2H14. With its newest 22nm Atom SoC processors and existing 22nm Core x86 flagship microprocessors, Intel aims to ship 40 million tablet MPUs in 2014, up fourfold from 2013.
The April Update to The 2014 McClean Report provides final sales results and additional details of the latest MPU trends at Qualcomm, Samsung, and other top-10 MPU suppliers.
Intel still on the top ! :)
ReplyDeleteIt's not surprising.From the very beginning, Intel first developed microprocessor. Why not they'll be the number one supplier.What a very competitive!👏👏👏
ReplyDelete-mendeja JL
Intel is d' best (y) :D
ReplyDelete-Jerome NP
Astig tlga intel
ReplyDeleterollonrjs
The best prin ang intel!
ReplyDeleteLilang
Mabangis pa din c INTEL :)
ReplyDelete#no.1INTEL
Bordas
Mabangis pa din c INTEL :)
ReplyDelete#no.1INTEL
Bordas
Hindi na nakakagulat na ang Intel ang top 1 kc Kung mapapnsin natin most of their inventions are focused on gadgets such as computers, cellphones and tablets and etc, meaning ito mas tatangkilikin ng mga consumer pagtinangkilik mas malaki ang Kita mas malaki ang interest at mas marami pang microprocessor na maidedevelope, unlike sa pangtop 2 may specific instruction cla sa microprocessor nila na ang makikinabang ay ang Arm Camp,
ReplyDeleteWell mas magaling parin ang intel kasi mas inisip nilang kumita habang nagiinvent ng mga bagong microprocessor, at un ang dahilan kung bakit ako bilib parin sa intel!
Well intel is the best!
:)sabella:0
Wow!Intel really did to be #1 leading competitive supplier of microprocessor. Ever since,they also made the invention of microprocessor.
ReplyDeleteLonghas, CJ
Intel is a very reliable company. I'm glad that samsung is on the list too.
ReplyDeletealright!
ReplyDeleteIntel Rock the technology era !!!
ReplyDeleteRamos,Adonis