AMD: 40 Years of “Just Doing it”


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AMD celebrates its 40th anniversary May 1st and I want to provide my thoughts and perspective. Yes, I am a proud AMD employee, so this blog is biased in that I am personally invested in AMD’s future success and its history. To me AMD means a lot of things, but the best way I can express it is to say: AMD means “We can” and “Can do”.

Let me tell you about that.

I met up with AMD during my tenure at Compaq Computer Corp. starting in 1995. Back then, lots of PCs sold for as much as $2,000 and the idea of notebooks for consumers instead of just business people was new. AMD helped change the entire landscape on both those fronts and the market has never been the same.

I also fondly recall loving the ATI RageTM Pro graphics card. In fact it was at that time that Compaq actually soldered the ATI Rage Pro engine onto the motherboard [it was in fact the first motherboard-resident AGP graphics chip]. Soldering anything on a mobo back in the day was a huge commitment and vote of confidence.

In late 2000, I joined AMD and have called it home ever since.

I admire AMD for a lot of things, but three things come top of mind:

1. Integrity, the highest levels.

2. Putting customers first, sometimes seemingly at its own peril.

3. Defying the pundits and “just doing it”

#1 and #2 are reasonably self-explanatory so I will drill down into #3.  I will provide the “dialogue” as people may have heard it play-out many times before:

  • 1990 Pundit: “You have the 386 mask set, but not the microcode. No way can you make a 386.”

But AMD did it.

  • 1992 Pundit: “You don’t have the 486 mask set or the microcode. No way can you make a 486.”

But AMD did it.

  • 1997 Pundit: “You have relied on Intel’s infrastructure this whole time so no way you can make a 7th generation CPU with an AMD-based motherboard infrastructure. You are dead.”

But AMD did it.

  • 1999 Pundit: “New and proprietary instruction sets from massive companies are the way to go. You are nuts if you think you can drive a 64-bit instruction set by yourselves. You will be dead.”

But AMD did it.

  • 2003 Pundit: “No way you can get into the datacenter. You are just a consumer desktop CPU company. Get back in your box.”

But AMD did it.

  • 2007 Pundit: “You’ve lost graphics technology leadership and you won’t ever get it back. The competition is too tough.”

But AMD did it.

So I hope I refreshed your memory banks on what pundits may have said, how AMD said “we can” and how AMD “just did it”.  I want to highlight that we didn’t do anything on our own without the support of our customers, their customers, and technology and infrastructure partners.

I am excited about AMD, our employees, and our future.  I am excited about what we plan to bring to our customers on cloud server computing and media-rich consumer usage models. Pundits will take shots and that’s okay, as it tends to motivate us and enhance the sweetness of our successes in the end.

Pundits laughed when Kennedy set his challenge to send a man to the moon and return him safely by the end of the 1960s. We like our moon-shots at AMD, too, and surprising the pundits again and again. :)

AMD, happy 40th and I promise I will keep promoting the “we can” attitude and we’ll just do it.

Note: Nigel Dessau, CMO and SVP at AMD is also providing his unique blog perspective on the 40th anniversary here.

Pat Moorhead is Vice President of Advanced Marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.

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  1. #1 by Doug - April 29th, 2009 at 23:19

    Being an AMD fan and long time shareholder since the late 90s, it never ceases to amaze me how often people under estimate AMD. Dirk and his team have come through time and time again. Prove the critics wrong I will say.

    PS. Please pull in Bulldozer :)

    • #2 by Patrick Moorhead - April 30th, 2009 at 09:24

      Thanks for the comment and appreciate watching over us for so long. It has been exciting to work under three leaderships of Jerry Sanders, Hector Ruiz, and now Dirk. Yes, we are being underestimated again. :)

  2. #3 by Surya - April 29th, 2009 at 23:45

    Yeah, AMD People always say “We Advanced IT, Others only follower.

    • #4 by Patrick Moorhead - April 30th, 2009 at 09:21

      Do you agree or disagree that we have advanced IT?

      • #5 by Surya - April 30th, 2009 at 17:34

        @Patrick Moorhead, I’m agree and believe your company is always innovated and improved the current technology. I’m always excited that the products that you bring to the customer is always benefited without forced to customer to pay a lot of money. Now, I hope AMD will be a leader in platform innovations that is not only for current processor, core logic and graphics but also other products, like wireless.

  3. #6 by WadeH - April 30th, 2009 at 04:55

    Happy 40th Anniversary AMD!

    I like the principles stated in Your post, Mr.Moorhead. May AMD continue on this path while bringing innovation to the market. I have never purchased or built a computer to date, although having several over the last few years that were given to me. Soon tho this will change, and I’m intending to build a system around the Dragon Platform. I’ve been reading product reviews and user posts, and there are still many pundits out there. Corei7 is strong and it’s supporters are many, and some of its supporters seem to care less about integrity or the spirit of competition. I wouldn’t call myself a fanboy, but I would definately like to see AMD continue to produce great products for decades to come. Bring on the Sledgehammer!

    • #7 by Patrick Moorhead - April 30th, 2009 at 09:29

      Thanks Wade. We will try our best to create more AMD fans! Nice to hear you have selected Dragon platform. I have personally built many Dragons with Phenoms and Radeons and have been very happy with the video decode, encode and gaming capability. Overclocking is fun, too. I hope you will also be happy with your Dragon. Let us know how your experiences go!

  4. #8 by Nate Supplee - April 30th, 2009 at 08:41

    Great read Patrick!

    I have always been a fan of AMD and ATI, even during the “down times”. I feel that AMD has always worked for the people, trying to bring products that have a better Price/Performance ratio than the “others”. I also feel that AMD has alway supported the enthusiast market very well.

    Has everything you produced always come out as great as we all hoped…? No. But you keep moving forward, trying to find innovative ways to serve the people right. Right now is a great time to use AMD/ATI products, there are some really great things happening. Phenom II, Radeon HD 48xx series, they are all great performers.

    • #9 by Patrick Moorhead - April 30th, 2009 at 09:25

      Nate, thanks for the comment and long-time support. Technology is a tricky thing and when any company is pumping out “firsts” there are always challenging. Companies that “follow” have a much easier time in that all they need to do is copy and try to improve on what’s there. :)

      • #10 by Nate Supplee - April 30th, 2009 at 09:48

        @Patrick Moorhead, Oh yeah, I understand that. AMD has always tried to innovate, and that isn’t a sure shot, like you said. As a whole, though, everything done by AMD has lead to a better market for PC users across the board. It forces everyone else to stay on their toes.

        I have always felt good competition is the key to positive development. And you bring it!

  5. #11 by edyros - April 30th, 2009 at 18:01

    Happy anniversary AMD!!!

    You guys really deserve it for all the good hard work and making the company we all love and appreciate.

    Keep the good job going on and hope to see a next anniversary from you guys in the following 20+ years (with God’s help).

  6. #13 by Mads Fløe - April 30th, 2009 at 19:37

    Congratulations to AMD on the big day!

    And just as important; Thanks for all the wonderfull years – it couldn’t make for any better of a starter for the years to come.

    Looking forward to see the thrive of AMD in REAL multicore processing in the near future.

    Bulldozer FTW! :)

  7. #15 by Kaison - May 1st, 2009 at 11:03

    I am a AMD fan since 1998, when I first build my computer, since then i have never used any other CPU or advise others to used any other CPU. Because AMD always had a CPU to match every one needs with the right price. Because AMD always provides something that is worth for the money.
    Currently I’m proud to say I am using my 4th(AMD) computer based on spider flat form.
    This day I have two questions for you,
    1. Why not AMD design engineers doesn’t on a smaller die area, like ATI did with its RV670 GPU. So this way AMD can sell CPU for lower price with out hurting their profits?
    2. I do not know why you all do not bring forwards the plans for Neo processor, I mean if you guys made it 45nm product it will sure has better TDP than the current one.
    Finally, i can’t wait for an era where I see the education institute computer’s filled with AMD CPUs.

    I wish you all good luck and all the best in the future. Do not worry we are not going any where and we all waiting for the sleeping giant to wake up!!!

    • #16 by Kaison - May 1st, 2009 at 11:06

      @Kaison,
      On the first question I forgot to add “focus” after “doesn’t”

  8. #17 by Alan - May 2nd, 2009 at 18:44

    AMD has certainly come a long way and since the introductions of the Phenom II they have placed themselves to the top of the best bang for the buck. Kudos to all at AMD and I cannot wait to see what is in store for us in the coming years. Maybe another Austin Tech day hint hint :)

    BTW thanks to you Mr. Moorhead and all of the AMD staff who brought the Phenom II preview to those of us that were fortunate to attend the Tech Day in Austin.

    • #18 by Patrick Moorhead - May 4th, 2009 at 08:35

      Alan, long time no talk! I am sure a few folks didn’t quite know what we were trying to accomplish until that Tech Day. That, I think, was the first time we had showed the extreme overclocking, then followed up by CES.

      Budgets are tight, but I love Tech Days and will advocate for them. You may want to shoot an email over to John Taylor and make that suggestion. :)

  9. #19 by Daniel - May 4th, 2009 at 04:10

    Great blog Patrick!

    I am a faithful AMD fan and user since the early 90’s and will always promote AMD.

    Like many others I am waiting for the coming Orochi processor ;)

    • #20 by Patrick Moorhead - May 4th, 2009 at 08:31

      Daniel, AMD and I sincerely appreciate your loyalty over the years. It looks like you have me by a few years with the “early 90’s”! I became a fan in 1995. Orochi is exciting, and I am excited for many of the product before that…. Istanbul, Magny Cours….etc. Take care!

  10. #21 by Mario Rubke - May 6th, 2009 at 17:12

    Nice words Patrick

    My first CPU was an AMD K6, then AMD Athlon XP, AMD Sempron (462), AMD Athlon 64 (754), AMD Athlon 64 (939), AMD Athlon X2 64 (AM2), and AMD Opteron X2 64 (AM2).

    Then i moved to the Intel side, but my graphics always has been ATI =)

    Now i’m expecting what’s new in the future for AMD and its new platform :)

    Best regards

    • #22 by Patrick Moorhead - May 6th, 2009 at 21:33

      Mario, thanks for the comment. We thank you for being a customer of AMD yesterday and today. Glad you are using ATI graphics and we will work even harder to win you back on the CPU side!

  11. #23 by mark - May 7th, 2009 at 20:13

    i just don’t know if i agree with both intel’s and AMD’s outlook on chip design.

    personally i think AMD would benefit from opening up the CPU design to the community as Sun did with their ultrasparc, AMD could try-out with an old no longer shipping product!

  12. #24 by Paul Konecny - May 13th, 2009 at 07:16

    Today I’m proud of being a citizen of the EU…I think you know why :)

    Time to wreck down some old sandy bridges with a bulldozer…
    (no bad puns intended here :) )

    Another question: Do you know / are you allowed to tell me when there will be a desktop version of the Istanbul-Opteron?

    Because I’m eager to buy myself one.

    Thank’s for the 40 great years and best wishes from Austria

  13. #25 by will - May 21st, 2009 at 12:11

    great!!!

  14. #26 by pete - May 24th, 2009 at 04:49

    No offend , Patrick,
    AMD still needs improvement on the laptop cpu cooling system and battery life usage area…
    I enjoy using AMD product , but the lack of improvement on the software side makes a lots of customer choose intell (example like the 3dnow instruction) either on gaming on graphic design /Video encoding with low performance compare to intell .

    Example : When enable “cool & quiet” (dynamic speed switching) feature will sometimes crash windows OS and need to reboot. I just hope AMD software or hardware engineer take note about this problem. (I using “speedswitchXP” to control)

    Thanks

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