> AMD's computing and graphics segment, which includes revenue for both consumer CPUs and GPUs, weighed in at $1.44 billion, a 73% year-over-year increase but 13% decline on the quarter
> AMD's computing and graphics segment, responsible for both the EPYC server and console chips, generated $1.44 billion, a 21% year-over-year decline
I'm struggling to understand how these two sentences fit together, maybe someone can help me out.
Is the revenue for the computing and graphics segment up 73% YoY or down 21% YoY?
"AMD's computing and graphics segment, responsible for both the EPYC server and console chips, generated $1.44 billion, a 21% year-over-year decline. AMD chalked this up to lower sales into the console market, while increased EPYC Rome sales reduced the impact.
In either case, the market's bullish prospects for AMD's EPYC Rome processors might be blunted by the lower revenue generation in this key segment. The unit posted a $26 million operating loss, compared to operating income of $45 million in the fourth quarter of 2019. AMD cited lower ASPs due to heightened cloud spending, and we know that Intel has been increasingly competitive as it slashed pricing on its competing Cascade Lake Refresh processors. Intel's server unit (DCG) also recently posted a 42.7% year-over-year sales increase due to coronavirus-spurred demand."
[+] [-] rrss|6 years ago|reply
> AMD's computing and graphics segment, responsible for both the EPYC server and console chips, generated $1.44 billion, a 21% year-over-year decline
I'm struggling to understand how these two sentences fit together, maybe someone can help me out.
Is the revenue for the computing and graphics segment up 73% YoY or down 21% YoY?
[+] [-] rrss|6 years ago|reply
Their computing and graphics segment is up 73% YoY.
> Computing and Graphics segment revenue was $1.44 billion, up 73 percent year-over-year and down 13 percent quarter-over-quarter
> Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom segment revenue was $348 million, down 21 percent yearover-year and 25 percent sequentially
[+] [-] ItsTotallyOn|6 years ago|reply
"AMD's computing and graphics segment, responsible for both the EPYC server and console chips, generated $1.44 billion, a 21% year-over-year decline. AMD chalked this up to lower sales into the console market, while increased EPYC Rome sales reduced the impact.
In either case, the market's bullish prospects for AMD's EPYC Rome processors might be blunted by the lower revenue generation in this key segment. The unit posted a $26 million operating loss, compared to operating income of $45 million in the fourth quarter of 2019. AMD cited lower ASPs due to heightened cloud spending, and we know that Intel has been increasingly competitive as it slashed pricing on its competing Cascade Lake Refresh processors. Intel's server unit (DCG) also recently posted a 42.7% year-over-year sales increase due to coronavirus-spurred demand."