Intel Prevails In Client CPU Sales, But Threadripper Pro Outsold Xeon Nearly 20:1 : Report
Intel Prevails In Client CPU Sales, But Threadripper Pro Outsold Xeon Nearly 20:1 : Report
Custom PC builder Puget Systems (opens in new tab) has shared its hardware trends of 2022, a detailed report that reveals the company’s sales for processors, graphics cards, storage, and other tidbits. However, it’s important to emphasize that the data refers to Puget Systems’ sales; therefore, it doesn’t represent global sales or market share.
AMD had a great 2021 year, finishing with over 70% market share in client processor sales. The chipmaker had a formidable line-up of Zen 3 chips at the time, and Intel’s 11th Generation Rocket Lake processors couldn’t compete. However, Intel slowly recovered its market share with the 12th Generation Alder Lake processors, the company’s first desktop hybrid parts. The data from January 2022 to December 2022 shows a steady decline in AMD Ryzen usage. AMD eventually unleashed its Ryzen 4 processors in September of 2022, and Intel was quick to fire back with its 13th Generation Raptor Lake chips. Nevertheless, Puget System noted that Zen 4 and Raptor Lake ended up in a deadlock and didn’t influence the state of the market share. The scales had already flipped, and Intel finished 2022 with a market share that surpassed 70%.
Intel clearly wasn’t a match for AMD in the workstation segment. By the end of 2022, Threadripper Pro processors owned 95% of the market share, whereas the remaining 5% went to Xeon chips. AMD’s Threadripper processors had outsold Intel’s offerings by nearly 20:1. Threadripper has gained favor with Puget System due to the processor’s irresistible attributes, such as more cores, a richer feature set, and a more affordable price tag over rival Xeon chips.
With the Ryzen Threadripper Pro 5000 WX-series processors, AMD stopped offering the regular variants to the retail market, marking the end of HEDT processors. Like other system integrators, Puget Systems had no choice but to transition to the more expensive Pro versions. The Threadripper Pro 5000 WX series hit the market in Q3 2022, the time frame when the chips started to catapult to the top of the Puget Systems charts.
Puget Systems tailors its workstations towards specialized workloads, including content creation, engineering, and scientific computing. The company, which solely utilizes Nvidia’s products, discovered an increasing trend for professional graphics (Nvidia RTX, formerly Quadro) cards. For instance, Nvidia’s GeForce graphics cards represented over 90% of the company’s sales. However, Puget System ended 2022 with just 80%.
The demand for professional graphics cards isn’t growing exponentially. However, Puget System believes that there are two main reasons for pushing customers toward professional graphics cards. The first reason is that Nvidia’s GeForce graphics card has become poor choices for multi-GPU configurations. The second reason is that the increasing popularity of virtual production and AI has prompted consumers to turn to professional graphics cards.
It’s not a coincidence that Nvidia’s mainstream Geforce graphics cards have stopped being compelling options for multi-GPU systems. This is because Nvidia has limited NVLink support over the previous generations of GeForce graphics cards. For instance, the Geforce RTX 3090 (Ampere) was the last mainstream GeForce product to feature NVLink support until Nvidia completely pulled the plug on NVLink on the latest GeForce RTX 40-series (Ada Lovelace) graphics cards.
There’s also a lack of blower-type GeForce models, which are the kinds that you want in a server rack with numerous graphics cards sandwiched together. Almost every Nvidia partner had a blower version of the GeForce RTX 3090, then miraculously disappeared or was made end-of-life. There were whispers that Nvidia wasn’t too happy that some system integrators were using these GeForce RTX 3090 blower graphics cards instead of their products more expensive professional offerings. GeForce RTX 4090 blower models are on the market if you look hard enough. But it’s rare, and even the vendor fears putting its name on it. In addition, the lack of an NVLink connector doesn’t make the GeForce RTX 4090 an attractive option.
Due to the almost parity between NVMe and SATA SSDs at the lower capacities, it’s unsurprising that the former is the primary storage device in 95% of Puget Systems’ products. In addition, further pricing improvements have brought 1TB or less NVMe drives within a few dollars range of a conventional SATA SSD. As a result, Puget System’s usage of NVMe SSDs as the primary device has grown to 100%.
Although NVMe SSDs are within consumer buying capacity, SATA SSDs and hard drives are still somewhat relevant for secondary storage. Regarding overall drive usage, NVMe drives represent an 80% market share. However, SATA SSDs and hard drives still occupy 10% of the storage usage. Puget System assessed that until high-capacity NVMe drives, such as those 4TB and larger, drop in pricing, it doesn’t expect SATA SSDs, and much less hard drives, to go away anytime soon.
Puget Systems was reluctant to transition entirely to Windows 11 at its debut. There were concerns about application compatibility and performance deterioration. As a result, the adoption rate was slow until around July 2022, when it started to ramp up. Nonetheless, Puget Systems’ preference for Windows 11 didn’t pass Windows 10 until October 2022. The company still has customers that prefer Windows 10; however, it won’t be long. As of March 2023, 70% of the systems that Puget Systems sell has Windows 11 as the operating system.
At the time, Zen 4 and Raptor Lake weren’t on the market long enough to be a factor in the charts. With more time to fight it out, AMD may snatch more markets from Intel. As for the workstation segment, Intel recently launched the company’s 4th Generation Sapphire Rapids Xeon chips, pushing the core count up to 60 to rival AMD’s Threadripper. However, AMD won’t just stand still with its arms crossed. The chipmaker’s Threadripper 7000 (Storm Peak) chips with Zen 4 cores will hit the market before the year ends. So it’ll be interesting to see whether Sapphire Rapids will help Intel gain some ground in the workstation segment.
Puget Systems is convinced that Nvidia is the way to go regarding graphics card options. Unless AMD launches something convincing this year, it’s hard to imagine an AMD graphics card on Puget Systems’ chart next year.