AMD takes the high end of the CPU performance market while Intel gets the low-end. Credit: Rob Schultz/IDG AMD saw another quarter of outstanding growth in sales of its server chips, giving the company its highest single-quarter gain for server CPUs since 2006 and eating into Intel’s most valuable market segment, according to the latest market report from Mercury Research. We’ll get to the desktop segment later, but AMD’s server CPU share grew 1.8 percentage points from Q4 2020 to Q1 2021, from 7.1% to 8.9%. That is astonishing as server numbers just don’t move like that so quickly. In the same single-quarter period, Intel slipped 1.8 percentage points, from 92.9% to 91.1%. There is seasonality in the server market, where it is normal for sales to go down in Q1, Dean McCarron, president of Mercury Research, told me. Cloud-server companies like AWS and Google go through a build/burn cycle where they buy a lot, then take time to deploy it all. Right now we are at the very bottom of build cycle where they buy the least amount, so if they are putting up these kinds of numbers during a low point, it will be even better when they start buying again. Last month AMD reported fantastic Q1 revenues of $3.45 billion, up 93% from the same quarter in 2020. The company expects revenue for Q2 FY 2021 of roughly $3.6 billion, up about 86% year-over-year. The irony is that AMD unit sales are actually down thanks to the supply shortage we’ve all heard about. AMD is making up for it by selling more high-end parts, both client and server, than low-end. Intel has been ramping Celeron PC processors for some time, McCarron said. It had a big problem supplying chips for more than 18 months, but eventually it caught up with demand. Then Apple dumped Intel and decided to go with its home-grown Arm processor for Mac, freeing up even more Intel capacity. That’s a bad one-two punch for Intel, selling low-end Celerons while Xeons that sell for 10 times the price are slipping. For the first quarter of 2021, processor shipments were just slightly lower than the fourth quarter of 2020, which is typical, coming off the Christmas rush. However, with continued work and schooling from home, PC sales continue to explode. First quarter 2021 shipments of PC CPUs were the second-highest volume in history—second only to the previous quarter. Compared to the first quarter of 2020, total shipments were up 41%, the highest on-year growth seen in PC processor shipments since 1996, says McCarron in a research note. All told, AMD has continued to gain market share for 16 of the last 17 quarters. Related content news Pure Storage adds AI features for security and performance Updated infrastructure-as-code management capabilities and expanded SLAs are among the new features from Pure Storage. By Andy Patrizio Jun 26, 2024 3 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Nvidia teases next-generation Rubin platform, shares physical AI vision ‘I'm not sure yet whether I'm going to regret this or not,' said Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang as he revealed 2026 plans for the company’s Rubin GPU platform. By Andy Patrizio Jun 17, 2024 4 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news Intel launches sixth-generation Xeon processor line With the new generation chips, Intel is putting an emphasis on energy efficiency. By Andy Patrizio Jun 06, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news AMD updates Instinct data center GPU line Unveiled at Computex 2024. the new AI processing card from AMD will come with much more high-bandwidth memory than its predecessor. By Andy Patrizio Jun 04, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe