AMD buying Intel? It’s on the table

2 weeks ago 4

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

A tray of Intel Core Ultra CPUs. Intel

We think of AMD and Intel as exactly what they are — fierce rivals. However, the U.S. government is encouraging Intel to consider a merger with a rival, such as AMD, to counteract the intense financial trouble the company has been in over the past several months, according to a report from Semafor.

Intel just released its earnings for the third quarter of the year, where the company revealed that it had lost $16.6 billion. Year-over-year, Intel’s net profit margin has dropped by 6,064.76%. That’s not a typo. Intel is bleeding money, and according to the report, the U.S. government sees the chipmaker as too important to go under. At the moment, Semafor reports that talks between the government and Intel are “purely precautionary,” but multiple options to recover the brand are on the table.

One such option is a merger, with potential companies being AMD or Marvell. The merger would only impact Intel’s chip design business, while its foundry business would remain unscathed. This, in the eyes of the U.S. government, makes sense. Although enthusiasts debate about whether AMD or Intel make the best processors, Intel has been at the heart of government subsidies through the CHIPS Act due to its manufacturing business.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming

Under the CHIPS Act, Intel has been promised close to $30 billion in government subsidies split across grants and low-interest loans. Despite passing in 2022, however, the CHIPS Act has yet to pay out any money to Intel, or any other recipients. Intel hasn’t shared critical details about its financial situation with the government to prove it has a viable plan to take advantage of the additional funds, according to reporting from Bloomberg.

At the moment, the future of Intel doesn’t hang on recent CPUs like the Core Ultra 9 285K, but rather what it can deliver in its manufacturing facilities. Earlier this year, Intel canceled its 20A node in order to focus engineering resources on 18A. The company has already scored contracts for 18A with Microsoft and the U.S. Department of Defense, and with Intel losing cash quarter-over-quarter, it wants to fulfill those contracts as fast as possible.

This focus still concerns Intel’s manufacturing business. Intel has considered splitting its design and manufacturing businesses, which might help the company in the long run. If a company like AMD were to purchase the design wing, the funds awarded to Intel would go strictly toward manufacturing, which is reportedly the U.S. government’s main concern given rivals like TSMC in Taiwan and a growing semiconductor industry in mainland China.

Jacob Roach

Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…

AMD could swipe some of the best features of Nvidia GPUs

AMD logo on the RX 7800 XT graphics card.

Nvidia overwhelmingly dominates the list of the best graphics cards, and that largely comes down to its feature set that's been enabled through DLSS. AMD isn't sitting idly by, however. The company is researching new ways to leverage neural networks to enable real-time path tracing on AMD graphics cards -- something that, up to this point, has only really been possible on Nvidia GPUs.

AMD addressed the research in a blog post on GPUOpen, saying that the goal is "moving towards real-time path tracing on RDNA GPUs." Nvidia already uses AI accelerators on RTX graphics cards to upscale an image via DLSS, but AMD is focused on a slightly different angle of performance gains -- denoising.

Read more

AMD CPUs just got a major performance update for games

AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D installed in a motherboard.

Major motherboard brands are gearing up for the release of AMD's upcoming Ryzen 9000X3D processors with BIOS updates that add support for the new CPUs. Alongside support, some brands, such as Gigabyte and Asus, have added an "X3D Turbo Mode," which is said to boost performance by up to 35%.

The update is targeting some of the best processors packing AMD's 3D V-Cache tech, but it might give other AMD processors a boost, too. One user on X (formerly Twitter) took the update out for a spin in Forza Horizon 5 and found a 5% uplift on the Ryzen 7 9700X. That's a far cry from the 35% we've seen quoted by Gigabyte, but it's a promising performance improvement nonetheless considering that this CPU doesn't come with 3D V-Cache.

Read more

The death of Moore’s Law is finally starting to stink

The back of the Core Ultra 9 285K CPU.

For more than two decades we've heard about the death of Moore's Law. It was a principle of the late Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, positing that the number of transistors in a chip would double about every two years. In 2006, Moore himself said it would end in the 2020s. MIT Professor Charles Leiserson said it was over in 2016. Nvidia's CEO declared it dead in 2022. Intel's CEO claimed the opposite a few days later.

There's no doubt that the concept of Moore's Law -- or rather observation, lest we treat this like some law of physics -- has lead to incredible innovation among desktop processors. But the death of Moore's Law isn't a moment in time. It's a slow, ugly process, and we're finally seeing what that looks like in practice.
Creative solutions

Read more

Read Entire Article