Intel and AMD are the two main producers of x86-based processors. While Intel is typically considered the higher performing option, AMD provides strong value through more affordable pricing. For gaming, AMD has an advantage for budget builds through its dedicated graphics technology, though Intel performs better at the high-end. Overall, Intel usually offers better performance through faster chipsets and cache, but AMD releases comparable performing processors later at lower prices and power consumption.
2. Outline
• Introduction of both processors
• AMD VS INTEL
• COST
• Which one is better for gaming
• Which one offers better performance
• Which processor is better overall
3. Short Introduction of Both companies
AMD:
• Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) is an American
worldwide semiconductor company based in California, United States, that
develops computer-processors and related technologies for business and
consumer markets.
• Advanced Micro Devices was formally incorporated on May 1, 1969
• AMD is the second-largest supplier and only significant rival to Intel in the
market for x86-based microprocessors
• AMD or Advanced Micro Devices is a company that has been producing
semiconductors, microchips, CPUs, motherboards, and other types of
computer equipment for the last 40 years. That makes them the second
largest company in this sector currently after Intel.
4. Intel
Intel Corporation (better known as Intel) is an American multinational technology
company
It is the inventor of the x86 series of microprocessors, the processors found in
most personal computers. Intel supplies processors for computer system
manufacturers such as Apple, Samsung, HP and Dell. Intel also
makes motherboard chipsets, network interface controllers and integrated
circuits, flash memory, graphics chips, embedded processors and other devices
related to communications and computing.
Intel Corporation was founded on July 18, 1968 Intel, or the Intel Corporation, was
founded a year earlier in 1968. Both companies were incorporated in Valley in the
USA, and are leaders in research and development in the field. These multinational
companies are also well known for developing production facilities in Asia, such as
in Taiwan, China, Malaysia, and Singapore. it is said their products are in use in
every country where PCs are used.
5. • Both AMD and Intel produce mother boards which are the circuitry at
the base of all personal computers. AMD and Intel also create CPU or
Central Processing Unit chips for the personal computer. While both
are in the same industry but are always vying against each other for
market share and technological changes.
6. AMD VS Intel?
• An AMD CPU is generally the right choice for those working on a tight
budget
• AMD first focused on producing logic chips
• Intel have much more efficient memory controllers.
• Generally Intel is considered better, but it becomes questionable at the
lower price points.
• intel processors can be better than amd processors, but i never seen why
the processors at the same level are so much more expensive on the intel
side. like what is the difference between an AMD Athlon x4 750k ($80) and
an Intel Core i5-3570 ($210).
• The main difference between AMD And INTEL is Cost And efficiency
7. AMD VS Intel?
• The process are so far apart yet they both have 3.4 GHz, both quad
core, so they're basically the same processor? sure the intel runs a
little more efficient with 77W power compared to amd's 100W, but i
don't think that thats worth the $130 price difference.
• Intel Core i5 and Core i7 series processors are the better choice if you
have more money to spare and a high-end GPU at your disposal.
• AMD is better choice for those who have tight budget
8. • AMD's FX-8320E performed well in Excel 2013, taking just 5.9
seconds to complete the workload and 4.5 seconds once
overclocked. At its stock settings, the FX-8320E was 15% faster than
the i5-4430 and 51% faster than the i3-4360. Those numbers
jumped to 51% and 98% after overclocking
9. Cost
• Cost is main thing that is depending on it .
• AMD is said to offer the same basic product at a cheaper price than Intel.
• Intel is established as the market leader in producing motherboards and
processing chips for personal computers, and their prices and development
have influenced AMD from the start.
• The AMD Athlon XP processor runs very close to an Intel 4 processor and is
about half the price
10. Competition and Market Share
• Intel is the inventor of the x86 series of Microprocessors and today
both AMD and Intel are competitors at this.
• While Intel is said to be the largest producer of x86 based processors
in the world, AMD is number two in it.
• Intel came out of 2006 with 77.7 per cent of the x86 CPU market, up
from 76.3 per cent. Its 1.4 percentage point gain matched a 1.4
percentage point decline in AMD's x86 market share, which fell from
2005's 23.7 per cent to 22.3 per cent.
12. Which one is best for gaming?
• For budget gaming, AMD wins hands down – it bought graphics processor firm ATI back
in 2006 and since then the company has invested heavily in graphics technology,
especially for mobile devices such as laptops.
• Intel has been investing too, but it's playing catch-up here – in budget processors and
PCs, AMD's Radeon graphics system runs rings around Intel's integrated graphics
(although Intel is closing the gap, and its Iris Pro technology, which appears in the latest
generation of Core processors, is a vast improvement over the previous HD Graphics
systems).
• Firstly, you need to decide what your priorities are, and what you will use the PC for.
Things such as: light gaming, heavy gaming, basic work (e.g. MS Office)
• In newer games though such as BF4 the AMD's have caught up in performance and in
some cases deliver better performance than the intel's for much less money.
13. AMD vs Intel: which one offers the best performance
• If you look at the fastest high-end systems around, they're
generally Intel-powered – although once you get to those heady
heights the differences between similarly specified Intel Core i7
and AMD A10 PCs can often be microscopic.
• Intel offers the best performance than AMD
14. CONT……
• Architecturally, performance, and price are the main differences.
• AMD is geared more towards budget based rigs.
• Intel is more high performance high end rigs will cost a bit more but you
get more
• Another difference is that AMD chips do not currently offer integrated
graphics in any of the desktop chips. Select Intel i series CPUs have an
integrated graphics processor inside the CPU.
• In the last few years Intel has been holding the performance crown in most
all of the benchmark testing. But AMD has held the crown for pricing. You
can usually pick up an AMD CPU for 20-60% less than the cost of a similar
performing Intel chip.
• (Competitor AMD typically costs less, and is therefore more commonly
found on budget-priced Windows boxes.)
15. Which Processor is Better: Intel or AMD?
• it depends on what you want to do with your laptop or PC, including any restrictions you
may have.
• In terms of a laptop or netbook, you will most likely want a processor with the highest
GHz (gigahertz), with many cores (or threads) as possible, with the lowest TDP (Thermal
Design Point)as possible. All of this has to do with heat dissipation, and I'll explain that a
bit further down.
• In 2002, Intel introduced Hyper Threading on their high-end CPUs, which allowed the
processor to start more than one task at a time. This made the processor more efficient
and faster. Hyper Threading essentially starts another task while the thread before it is
waiting for something to complete. Effectively it makes the processor "more busy,"
rather than sit idle. It should be noted that Hyper Threading is unique to Intel and is not
offered by AMD.
• In 2005, both Intel and AMD introduced their first multi-core processors. A multi-core
processor is effectively 2 or more processors on one chip. In terms of computing, a multi-
core processor is more powerful than one with Hyper Threading, because each core is an
independent logical processor,
16. Intel vs AMD: Why it matters
• If you’re buying a traditional laptop or PC, AMD and Intel are your only
choices for processors, but don’t make the mistake of thinking the PC’s
slump in popularity means either company is sliding towards irrelevance.
• Intel doesn't make all its money from PC and laptop processors, of course.
It also produces graphics processors, wired and wireless network adaptors,
server and workstation processors and components,
• AMD is the smaller of the two companies by some margin. For one thing,
while Intel builds its own chips in over a dozen fabrication (fab) plants in
the USA, Ireland, Israel and China, AMD sold off its last fab in 2009. Today,
just like ARM, VIA, MediaTek and others, AMD designs its own chips but
outsources the manufacturing. Producing microprocessors is formidably
expensive and AMD’s revenue pales in comparison to Intel’s:
17. So, which processor is "better?"
• Generally speaking: Intel usually has an upper hand on AMD because it produces
and releases processors to consumers faster than AMD which have: lower TDP
(more efficient chips), faster chipsets for the processor on the motherboard
(which can perform Input and Output operations much more quickly), more
cache on the processor (which can perform repetitive tasks more quickly), and
are usually better at overclocking (which is also related to the TDP).
• If you wait a bit, AMD tends to release processors that perform just as fast as
Intel a little later in the year, but they tend to be a little more power hungry.
• The key point here is that the word "better" usually implies "better for the time
being." This is especially true with respect to efficiency, as processors and
technology are always improving. For example: processor efficiency is especially
important in smaller devices such as laptops, netbooks, and tablets, because a
processor with low TDP will consume less power, thus extend battery life.
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