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Kevin Hofer
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2024 CPU review: a hard year

Kevin Hofer
25.12.2024
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

With the Snapdragon X, Qualcomm gave Intel and AMD serious competition in notebooks for the first time. Intel almost went down the drain, and AMD released the gaming CPU of the decade alongside unfinished products. 2024 was an interesting but hard year for CPUs.

Competition breeds innovation – or so they say. Following this, Qualcomm entering the market as another CPU player should be a good thing, no? But despite wielding competitive computing power for the first time, the new model hasn’t yet been able to establish itself significantly. 2024 would’ve been a great year for this at that, since former giant Intel is slacking. A look back at the past CPU year.

Despite the solid Snapdragon X performance, Qualcomm is struggling. In the third quarter of 2024, the market share of Snapdragon X devices was just 0.8 per cent. It seems the architecture hasn’t yet become established in Windows notebooks.

I think this share of Arm notebooks will grow as soon as there’s some competition. AMD and Nvidia may be new to Windows on Arm, but both have experience with the architecture and still build good chips in other respects. It’s why they enjoy the trust of notebook manufacturers and customers. This new competition is likely to further boost business.

But the damage has already been done. Not only from the error, but above all because of the communication and the way customers were treated. Intel initially didn’t want to be held liable for damages. The manufacturer only relented after those affected put up a fight. There goes your customer trust.

What I’m taking away from 2024

2024 was an exciting year in terms of CPUs. Thanks to Qualcomm and the Snapdragon X, something is finally happening in terms of efficiency for non-Apple products. With the Ryzen AI 300, AMD has proven that x86 architecture isn’t completely left in the dust by Arm in this respect either. If other players with Arm SoCs for notebooks come onto the scene in 2025, things are likely to get really exciting.

But 2024 has also provided warning signs: manufacturers are increasingly rushing their products onto the market. The latest desktop generations from AMD and Intel simply weren’t ready yet – it’s not surprising that customers feel like beta testers. Fixes have been released or are still being released at least, but I’d still prefer if manufacturers took more time.

Header image: Kevin Hofer

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From big data to big brother, Cyborgs to Sci-Fi. All aspects of technology and society fascinate me.


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