AMD recruits two high-level mobile chip veterans


Recommended Posts

AMD recruits two high-level mobile chip veterans

AMD has experienced some well-publicised staff losses and cuts recently as it seeks to re-shape and rationalise the company for the future. Things may look a little troubling now as it seems as if there are more high-level staff rushing out of the door than coming in, but AMD has been making some strategic recruitment decisions to steer the ship towards a more lightweight mobile future.

Less than a week ago fleeing AMD execs hit the headlines as it appears they took over 100,000 confidential trade documents with them to NVIDIA. At the end of 2012 we heard that AMD chief engineer and employee of over 25 years, Michael Goddard, left to join Samsung.

Positive recruitment moves

However today we have a report from Reuters about two very positive high-level recruitments. Charles Matar, recently at Qualcomm, has joined AMD as vice president of System-on-Chip Development. Mr Matar?s expertise lies in ?low-power and embedded chip design,? according to Reuters sources.

Secondly we hear that Wayne Meretsky has now joined AMD as vice president, software IP development. Mr Meretsky previously worked at Apple ?on processors used in the iPad and iPhone.? He will lead software development for new AMD chips.

Both Matar and Metersky worked at AMD earlier in their careers and they will join fellow ?chip guru? and ex-head chip designer from Apple, Jim Keller, to return to work at AMD.

a24af948-6039-41d8-9fcf-e72a21d44784.jpg

AMD Temash SoC sample

Revenue re-balancing - too many eggs in the PC basket?

AMD?s revenue is highly dependent upon the PC business with 80 per cent of its income coming from this sector. The chipmaker hopes to refocus and become less reliant upon traditional PCs, reducing its balance of PC industry revenue to about 50 per cent within the next three to four years.

Looking forward to the immediate future, AMD?s Temash and Kabini x86 SoCs are due in H1 2013, aimed at thin-and-light notebooks, convertibles and tablets, and are said to offer exceptional performance per watt. It will be interesting to see what computing device form-factors are enabled by these new chip designs.

Source

Maybe we'll see AMD powered phones in the near future?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i thought they had announced around this time last year that AMD was going to try to move into the mobile market?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

AMD needs to release a monster CPU like something with 16 cores to jumpstart the CPU race. We've been on dual and quad for over 4 years now and I don't think we'll be going anywhere within the next 4 years at this pace. Intel is milking the i7 and i5 brand with zero innovation for the past 4 years. The only reason to upgrade today is for a new motherboard with USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

AMD needs to release a monster CPU like something with 16 cores to jumpstart the CPU race. We've been on dual and quad for over 4 years now and I don't think we'll be going anywhere within the next 4 years at this pace. Intel is milking the i7 and i5 brand with zero innovation for the past 4 years. The only reason to upgrade today is for a new motherboard with USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s.

It won't help. Then the blue boys will start crying that the cores are weaker and still can't perform to i3 series. No matter what AMD does it will always stay behind (even if the cores are overperforming competition).

AMD has had the chance to release 16 core desktop CPU's for several years already, why they haven't done that is a question on its own.

People are still suggesting others to buy i3-series with HD integrated for low powered/low cost gaming while the fact is APU's blow those little pieces of crap out of the water. (Suggestions without dedicated graphics)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This topic is now closed to further replies.