This article was published as a part of the Data Science Blogathon. Introduction Hey folks! Data science is an emerging technology in the corporate society and it mainly deals with the data. Applying statistical analysis to data and getting insights from it is our main objective. A company wil store millions of records for analysis. A […]
MoonForce is the next-generation crypto multiverse that will allow project developers and NFT creators to launch on the MoonForce launchpad. The entire MoonForce ecosystem is powered by PYESwap which is the first swap to utilize BNB to power BuyBack functionality. The proprietary tech allows the BNB instead of the native token to be utilized in […]
Leading exchanges, polled by the Russian press, have indicated they are not afraid of the upcoming strict crypto regulations. A requirement for coin trading platforms to establish a local office is one of the proposals in a regulatory roadmap drafted by the government in Moscow. Cryptocurrency Exchanges to Set Up Shop in Russian Federation Some […]
Funding will support expansion into government agencies and Pharmacy Benefit Managers, and growth among traditional healthcare payers as they tackle payment integrity issues
While crypto slumps, the NFT market is going from strength to strength. Are we seeing the crypto-NFT decoupling?
In case you hadn’t noticed, crypto ain’t been doing so crash hot of late. Prices are down, volumes are down, scams are up and the prevailing atmosphere is
Bitcoin (BTC) may have fallen short of the $40,000 mark, but this week’s advances have aided in the formation of a more meaningful breakout for underlying price strength. Over the previous day, the worldwide crypto market cap increased by more than 1%. Many people are thinking that another ‘crypto winter’ is on the way due …
We built a neural theorem prover for Lean that learned to solve a variety of challenging high-school olympiad problems, including problems from the AMC12 and AIME competitions, as well as two problems adapted from the IMO.[1] The prover uses a language model to find proofs of formal statements. Each
AMD executives said Tuesday that the company has invested in securing enough manufacturing capacity for 2022 to meet demand, including its next generation microprocessors and GPUs.
“Demand for our product is very strong, and we look forward to another year of significant growth and share gains as we ramp our current products and launch our next wave of Zen 4 CPUs and RDNA 3 GPUs,” AMD chief executive Dr. Lisa Su told analysts during a Tuesday afternoon conference call. “We have also made significant investments to secure the capacity needed to support our growth in 2022 and beyond. Looking out over the long term, we are confident in our ability to continue growing significantly faster than the market, based on our expanded road map investments and the deep relationships we have established with a broad set of customers who view AMD as a strategic enabler of their success.”
AMD's confidence was expressed another way. The company predicted that revenue during the first quarter of 2022 would actually increase up 4 percent sequentially and 45 percent year-over-year to about $5 billion. That's highly unusual, given that the fourth quarter traditionally represents the height of consumer spending. Revenue typically drops sharply during the first quarter of the new year.
AMD's success is being built upon the company's growing server market as well as continued strength in semi-custom processors found inside game consoles and elsewhere. Su characterized the 2022 PC market as “flattish” compared with 2021, though that's not necessarily a negative term. She characterized the 2021 PC market as a “strong year for PCs” with about 350 million units sold. But, she said, AMD believed that it increased the “revenue share” of client processors for the seventh straight quarter.
“For 2022, I mean, our current view is that we'll see growth in all of our businesses,” led by servers, Su told analysts, according to a transcript of the call. “We see strong demand for our products, as well as we have increased supply capability, given what we've done with our partners.”
AMD's plans for 2022 include its Ryzen 6000 mobile processors on a 6nm process as well as its upcoming Ryzen 7000 processors (with the Zen 4 architecture) later in the year on a 5nm process. “We're very excited about our five-nanometer products,” Su said. “I think Zen 4 is, you know, very critical. It's a focus for this year for both our server road map, as well as our client road map.”
Su also said that AMD had “deepened the relationship” with its partners in the manufacturing business.
“We feel very good about our progress in the supply chain to meet the 2022 guidance and, you know, our goal is, frankly, to have enough supply to satisfy the demand out there,” Su added.
Overall, AMD reported record net income of $1.1 billion on revenue of $4.8 billion, up 49 percent year-over-year and the sixth consecutive quarterly record for the company. The revenue for the computing and graphics segment reported $2.6 billion, up 32 percent year over year. The company also reported a 75 percent increase in its semi-custom/server business to $2.2 billion.
In Part 1 of this post, we provided a solution to build the sourcing, orchestration, and transformation of data from multiple source systems, including Salesforce, SAP, and Oracle, into a managed modern data platform. Roche partnered with AWS Professional Services to build out this fully automated and scalable platform to provide the foundation for their […]