I hope you do a multipart series on AMDs history. It is truly fascinating. There are as many bold moves as there are instances of jeopardizing the company out of an insistence on treating employees like team members rather than consumables. That AMD survived from 2008 to 2014 is surreal in it's own right, and the comeback after that is even wilder.
Jerry Sanders the 3rd, his guerrilla tactics against Intel around 1995-200x, contracting the DEC Alpha CPU design team at discount price to launch K7 and Amd64. Amd releasing the first (x86) 1 ghz CPU in great quantities, and Intel only faking to release a 1 ghz Pentium 3 in limited quantities. Those are histories that deserve to be told I think. Best wishes.
I think AMD survived largely because of anti monopoly law, strict licensing potential issue (so practically limits who can buy them) and they were in such dire situation that nobody dared to invest on them knowing how hard to make profits from the potential acquisition.
I got to say AMD's pro employee culture seems to be continuing. Last year I did a 3 month internship with them and I had death in the family. They told me I didn't even have to fill out paper work or take time off. It was a very good place to work.
Wow, Jocelyn Lleno is sill active in the industry. She was working at the San Francisco fab wiring circuits onto wafers by hand and now is in a senior position at Global Foundries in Upstate New York.
She basically stayed with the same company for all her life (Considering Global Fundries is an AMD spin off). Lesson: treat your employees right, and you will get lifelong loyalty in return. Global Foundries is an AMD spin off. .
@@SirMo Not really, she went to work to many non AMD or GF companies in between according to her linkedin ha ha. What a crazy world we live in. Best wishes.
Please never change Asianometry. I work in semiconductor distribution/recycling and your videos have peeled back the history of this industry space for me like I’ve never seen centralized before .
Didn't know AMD's logo is unchanged. From one perspective it's nothing special, but it is very easy for them to use at any scale, works well on screens, and is kind of ahead of its time, so ultimately was a great choice.
AMD doesn’t exactly have a color on the logo itself but it’s overall theme and product packaging shifted from green to red. AMD’s simple logo design is definitely scalable and long lasting Kinda reminds me of Mitsubishi that also has simple shapes and timeless logo.
Literally _why_ we jokingly referred to AMD as Advanced Marketing Devices for years. They didn't advertise their products because they were mostly knock-offs.
15:09 the very first impression of the building sends out a feeling of acception to everyone. Ahead of the mainbuilding, round in shape and so seemingly open in every direction the entrance speaks the founders and company philosophy. Love it.
I gotta say, "Advanced Micro Devices" is a truly brilliant name for a semiconductor company. - Self-explainatory: straight to the point of what the company is all about. - Short, handy acronym that rolls off the tongue very easily. - Built-in advertising slogan: promises cutting-edge products.
The oldest continuously operating chip fab plant in the world is a former Fairchild Camera plant here it South Portland, Maine it is now split into two plants, one owned by Diodes, the other by TI.
I deeply miss companies with leadership that values it's employees. They certainly still exist, but at the same time, treating employees badly has become far more accepted than it should be. It's not 'just business' when you are interrupting people's lives.
Fun fact: Jack Gifford (one of the founders of AMD) would later go on to found Maxim Integrated, a leading analog IC company recently acquired by Analog Devices. Really cool stuff!
Man, there is so much to this story that you could literally do 10 episodes on it and that would still be leaving a lot on the table. The rivalry between AMD and Intel (or shall I say, Intel's numerous illegal and immoral legal shenanigans against AMD) is of course very interesting but even their very recent history, including their incredible comeback with Ryzen, is fascinating. I look forward to hearing you tell more of this story in the future!
Keep in mind AMD is no innocent saint. It has much less sins I think as it was the little one of the two. But they have "evil" actions, if not so many as Intel. Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. Intel was much more powerful much of the time, and probably still is. If AMD was the powerful one, the things would be almost surely reversed. Best wishes.
@ajax700 This is true, of course, but we can still feel bad for AMD as the victim of intels Shenanigans. Intel literally paid companies not to use amd products. This doesn't even mention the multitude of other companies that don't exist anymore because intel crushed them.
I truly love this channel... and I think the vintage sounding text-to-speech bot you are using is so satirically good. Better than any human could deliver this content.
@@lahma69 Yes, but I'm just clowning.. i love this channel and also think he does a great job... just the right amount of humor, amplified by the deadpan voice. Laughing with, not at.
$45,000 annual pay... That's $386,857 today. A *YEARS* salary severance. According to Glassdoor, so grain of salt, AMD's current Marketing Director is pulling $410,298/yr. Kinda feels like it should be a lot more today.
Starts with a generous stock program for employees, transitions that into a profit sharing one and has a 'lifetime employee' system for a while. This Sanders guy seems pretty decent in my book 😀
Jon, one of your best videos! You rock man! We have an accelerated learning program in our elementary school and the teacher was blown away learning of your channe. Thank you for what you do and keep the videos rollin' !!!
I used the Am2901 ALU +Am2910 microsequencer in '80's to develop a new 16 bit bit-slice CPU (4 bit*4 AM2901) circuit and wrote microcode myself. It was arduous job. There was no CAD tools back then. I had to design the circuit by hand and write software tools for it on PDP-11 mini computer. Everyone who is really interested in computer hardware architecture should try to design new CPU with Am2900 series bit-slice chips.
@@ntabile Yeah I get that, times are different obvious but from people in recent times, I've heard AMD isn't too bad culture (except the RTG division, especially when Raja worked there) But lots of historical accounts say Intel was and still is a ruthless ahole company, to it's people except top management and to the general industry from get go and nothing has changed in 50+ years. That said, seems that don't even look after their top management anymore either since they kick them in the ass and churn them over like disposable items if they don't do well.
I was introduced to the Fairchild 303 and series 70 around 1981. What a PITA! (The series 70, the 303 was pretty decent) FYI, we used a lot of AMD 8088s on the IBM PC/XT production line.
Jerry Sanders the 3rd, his guerrilla tactics against Intel around 1995-200x, Nexgen Nx686, contracting the DEC Alpha CPU design team at discount price to launch K7 and Amd64. Amd releasing the first (x86) 1 ghz CPU in great quantities, and Intel only faking to release a 1 ghz Pentium 3 in limited quantities. Those are histories that deserve to be told I think. Best wishes.
Not related to the AMD story, but the footage at 12:03 with the warehouse forklift operator ... I would have some serious word with anyone who drives like that. He has a impaired line of sight due to the hight of the payload, a huge safety risk. Driving reverse with a free line of sight is mandatory.
The boy's from New England ! Yeah, they took their sweet time getting distributors to sell their wares. I still remember buying directly from AD well into the late 80s !
Just wanted to say I have been a fan of Volvos since I was a kid (before you were born)! Our 1995 940, with the looks of a chest freezer but an awesome turbo 4 cyl. capable of 140 mph, got us through three kids over 19 years and more than a quarter-million miles. The guy we sold to had added another 100k miles at last report. Best car we ever owned!
awesome video, I enjoyed it, but I hope you will make a part II from 1980s until today, it's a fascinating history and I wish to know how it continues...
My Father made 2 friends during his Apprenticeship at GEC in 1957, John Carey was one of them. They went on to work at GEC defence department where Germanium transistors were being produced. John Carey left in 59 and moved to Canada, to Fairchild them help start up AMD. My Father remained with GEC, then Marconi space and Defence for his whole working life. He worked on Polaris then Trident guidance systems and was the longest serving Englishman on the ICBM projects.
If you had bought a single share of AMD for $15.50 when they went public today the share would be worth, $266,693. Really glad you're doing a series on AMD. It's such an interesting Cinderella story that should be studied in business schools.
@Doctor Whowhotheowl There was 500,000 shares issued originally. Today there are 1'613'000'000 shares. Meaning each share back then is equal to 3,226 shares today (1613000000 ÷ 500000). This is not ideal as there was dilution, but there was also stock buybacks. So this number isn't perfect but it's the best I can do without going through each 10K since the beginning of time.. If you have 3,226 shares of AMD based on the current price of $82.67 price per share, you would have $266,693 value.
Main beneficiaries there are those that bought a lot to begin with (faith in the company). Held on long term like 20-30 years (retirement investment), and reinvested dividends in buying more stock (growing the investment, and countering any fees and inflation).
its mirace how its core employees still going through together in the moment,i would say a "nothing else to lose " moment with zen 1,and then survive,miracle
20+ years of using amd cpu's for me (using ryzen now) partly due to my annoyance with intel adverts and their little binging sound played in every pc ad that had intel inside ! but mainly due to cost and long term upgrade paths that did not require a new motherboard and memory for every cpu upgrade !
TBF we had to wait until AM2+ and AM3 to have that upgrade path and until AM4 to have a large compatibility during 5+ years. Before that there was SlotA/Socket A for K7, then socket754/939/AM2 for K8. APUs were a mess though, with FM1 incompatible with FM2 and FM2+, then incompatible with AM4. Memory is less of an issue with Intel, as they've made some arch compatible with two DDR gen to ease transition (eg. skylake and alderlake) whereas AMD dropped that after K10 (I know there was Excavator gen but as 28nm APUs it wasn't really a viable desktop option and DDR4 wasn't available on FM2+, like DDR3 wasn't on AM4).
another grrrreat video, and what a conclusion "after reaching the Company's 1980 sales goal, AMD CEO Jerry Sanders draws a slip of paper from a bowl containing the names of all company employees and 21 year old Josie Lleno, a recent Filipino immigrant making less than $4 / hour on the graveyard shift, struggling to support an extended family, wins $1,000 / month for 20 years for the purchase of a $250,000 house in California (worth ~ $50 million today).
great great video! can I help you do one on Digital Equipment Corporation, my father was an executive there, starting in the late 1960's and until the end of the company and I met almost all the key people there.
13:10 64 bit RAM in the early 70s? How or why was that possible? I suppose you don't necessarily need a 64 bit CPU to use 64 bit RAM but why else would you want 64 bit RAM?
You are clearly young… :-) You are thinking of the width of the address bus on CPU. The capacity of early memory chips was measured in bits. Take 8 of those 64-bit chips and you could store 64 bytes! Then the capacity increased to kilobits, then megabits.
@@rok1475 Is 48 young?😂 But I hadn't been born when this ad was published so maybe in this case I am. I get it now. Total capacity, not bus width. Amazing!
These RAMs were 16 words of 4 bits each, for a total of 64 bits. These were used not for the main memory of computers (core memory was dominant at the time), but rather to build the primary registers of the CPUs. For example, in a PDP-11 mini-computer, 4 such parts could be combined to build a memory that is 16 bits wide by 16 deep. The PDP-11 architecture presents the programmer with 8 general registers, so the remaining registers might be used as internal temporary registers. This is also in line with the AM2900 processors that came later in the 1970's, which implement a 4 bit wide processor. Put 4 of them side by side, and you have the beginning of a 16 bit CPU, years before that could all be put on a single chip.
The architecture team for the 2900 family was re-tasked in late 1984 to do the AM29000. Eventually some of that team moved to AMD Austin and worked on the K5 on-wards. (also, thanks for the compliment)
Hey just a question, you showed a pic of Manilla's manufacturing space. Whereas you mentioned that it was in Penang, Malaysia. Two different countries countries btw
I suspect he knew that, since each were correctly identified. I thought the same thing, but the clip art was correctly referenced, even if it was during the time of mentioning the other location. I bet the producer could not find an original image of the correct facility!
AT 14:44 you told us each employee got $146,150 pay out. but heres the question how many employees did they have and what was the average salary of them, at the time.?
Loving the history and the next part 👍 - my introduction to AMD was deciding on a S7 K233 over Intel back in the late 90s when I built my first PC - I always had a soft spot for the underdog 😊
AM2900 isn't a full processor itself, it's bitslice chips that you can use to build a microprogrammed CPU from a set of those chips. At my university, they were still that series as an example for a microprogrammed CPU in 2010, and we even had to write microprogram instructions for such a CPU in the practical part of the course. The AM2900 was one of the standout AMD products.
The AM2901 bit-slice ALU was significantly faster than both the 74181 and the Intel 3002. It used TTL signaling externally but actually used ECL gates.
@@me0101001000 TSMC is in part owned by it's own clients. Continuing to push semiconductor technology has gotten exponentially more expensive each generation, so I honestly think that TSMC will eventually become a client owned state licensed monopoly. That is, TSMC will forever be barred from entering any other market than chip manufacturing and advanced packaging and will have a maximum allowable profit margin in exchange for servicing every chip design company in the world.
Are you sure? zen 4 is a botch so bad they resorted to make zen 3 again (58003d), their GPU division is on flames, and the only winner they have is servers. Although those console contracts are juicy but profit wise are ok.
@@goa141no6I have absolutely no preference for AMD or intel over each other, if you look at the performance metrics from almost any perspective with any objective mindset, you cannot possibly say zen 4 was so botched they made it twice, at worst its performance was at least at parity with Intel’s equivalent generation, and in many cases exceeded Intel’s value proposition even in gaming performance, the X3D variant, while not really more cost-effective, did supersede Intel’s offerings at the time in single threaded gaming performance in the vast majority of games by a very appreciable amount. They have gained a massive amount of marketshare back from Intel over the past several years at a pretty consistent rate, ever since first GEN ryzen, which did have quite a few issues even all the way through third GEN. But as of now they are doing absolutely fantastic. They’re highest end GPUs leave some to be desired, but their mid tier offerings are still extremely compelling value propositions, and even on the high end it’s not so bad for them because of just how out to lunch in Nvidia’s pricing is for the significant majority of gamer budgets.
Truly fascinating story of the AMD company. Its founder Jerry Sanders built an inspiring and future proof company philosophy, that serves as a role model and inspiration for many companies even today. This is a real and valuable proof that even a simple ideas can flourish thx to hard work and belief of a view can steer the others on their side. AMD today is an important player and living legend.
Wow, that's an inspiring history of AMD & its values of treating its people right with a positive moral workplace philosophy in practice // really amazing !
Strictly, a selling price of $1.50 on a cost of £0.13 is a gross profit margin of 91.333%. In other words, 91.333% of the selling price is profit (gross, meaning before some other non-manufacturing costs are taken into account). Here's the math... Gross margin % = ((total revenue - COGS) / total revenue) x 100 COGS is "Cost of goods sold"
@mailsashablue That's the difference between gross profit and gross profit margin (GPM). Businesses in Europe also use GPM since it is a direct measure of gross profit relative to the value of sales, and is often used to help determine the viability of selling a particular product.
I'm going back in time to December 1974 to buy out AMD for 7 million Dollars. if i can't go back in time. i want to buy AMD for 150 Billion dollars. i will ask American banks to loan me 150 Billion so i can buy out AMD. AMD is my favorite company. Market capitalization of AMD (AMD) Market cap: $140.91 Billion As of March 2023 AMD has a market cap of $140.91 Billion. This makes AMD the world's 80th most valuable company
yep i am 70 now but i loved that bit slice family of processor from AMD. it was lightning fast and it was cheap. Data General i think used AMD chips in their design
I hope you do a multipart series on AMDs history. It is truly fascinating. There are as many bold moves as there are instances of jeopardizing the company out of an insistence on treating employees like team members rather than consumables. That AMD survived from 2008 to 2014 is surreal in it's own right, and the comeback after that is even wilder.
Yeah, this definitely feels like a Part I. (Hint, Hint 😉)
Jerry Sanders the 3rd, his guerrilla tactics against Intel around 1995-200x, contracting the DEC Alpha CPU design team at discount price to launch K7 and Amd64.
Amd releasing the first (x86) 1 ghz CPU in great quantities, and Intel only faking to release a 1 ghz Pentium 3 in limited quantities.
Those are histories that deserve to be told I think.
Best wishes.
ATI subseries 🤞
I think AMD survived largely because of anti monopoly law, strict licensing potential issue (so practically limits who can buy them) and they were in such dire situation that nobody dared to invest on them knowing how hard to make profits from the potential acquisition.
@@elzur7434 He's already done an ATI history video.
The fact that their logo is basically unchanged since inception shows how great a design it was
You mean, “is” 😉
I would say it has more to do with no reactionary bosses. Put a leftoid in-charge and they change anything for whatever reason they have that day.
I got to say AMD's pro employee culture seems to be continuing. Last year I did a 3 month internship with them and I had death in the family. They told me I didn't even have to fill out paper work or take time off. It was a very good place to work.
What did you work on during your time at AMD?
Loyalty is given, loyalty is taken
How rare that is today to treat your employees well. I commend AMD.
Wow, Jocelyn Lleno is sill active in the industry. She was working at the San Francisco fab wiring circuits onto wafers by hand and now is in a senior position at Global Foundries in Upstate New York.
That's so cool to hear!
Global Foundries being an AMD Spin-Off Company.
She basically stayed with the same company for all her life (Considering Global Fundries is an AMD spin off). Lesson: treat your employees right, and you will get lifelong loyalty in return. Global Foundries is an AMD spin off. .
@@SirMo Not really, she went to work to many non AMD or GF companies in between according to her linkedin ha ha.
What a crazy world we live in.
Best wishes.
Wow, that is so awesome!
Please never change Asianometry. I work in semiconductor distribution/recycling and your videos have peeled back the history of this industry space for me like I’ve never seen centralized before .
Didn't know AMD's logo is unchanged. From one perspective it's nothing special, but it is very easy for them to use at any scale, works well on screens, and is kind of ahead of its time, so ultimately was a great choice.
@@sudo11 seems like they didn't really have a color for a long time.
AMD doesn’t exactly have a color on the logo itself but it’s overall theme and product packaging shifted from green to red.
AMD’s simple logo design is definitely scalable and long lasting
Kinda reminds me of Mitsubishi that also has simple shapes and timeless logo.
i miss when design was made to be timeless instead of for trends
It's nice that drawing names from a bowl included the regular people and not just the prestige jobs.
You're gonna hit a million subs in no time. You're a better writer and story teller than 99% of what's on TV/streaming right now.
Wow that ad copy at 10:00 is wild. Imagine a modern day tech venture trying that instead of talking about their tech. Great video!
Literally _why_ we jokingly referred to AMD as Advanced Marketing Devices for years. They didn't advertise their products because they were mostly knock-offs.
@@zodwraith5745it's ironic their current marketing is a mess
15:09 the very first impression of the building sends out a feeling of acception to everyone. Ahead of the mainbuilding, round in shape and so seemingly open in every direction the entrance speaks the founders and company philosophy. Love it.
I gotta say, "Advanced Micro Devices" is a truly brilliant name for a semiconductor company.
- Self-explainatory: straight to the point of what the company is all about.
- Short, handy acronym that rolls off the tongue very easily.
- Built-in advertising slogan: promises cutting-edge products.
Uhm but it was 17th in their naming options lol, they certainly didn't think about it that way 😂
It's a company name that ages very well too considering how innovative they are these days (3D stacking, chiplets, heterogeneous computing, etc)
@@erlienfrommars That's exactly what I'm thinking about aswell.
and for a short while, it was Advanced Mining Device 😂
And it starts with an "A" - on top of any alphabetically sorted list.
"Why don't we all get together and start a business?" Two friends and I asked in unison. Was the worst decision I have ever made. Period.
The oldest continuously operating chip fab plant in the world is a former Fairchild Camera plant here it South Portland, Maine it is now split into two plants, one owned by Diodes, the other by TI.
Good work. Keep it up!
I deeply miss companies with leadership that values it's employees. They certainly still exist, but at the same time, treating employees badly has become far more accepted than it should be. It's not 'just business' when you are interrupting people's lives.
Fun fact: Jack Gifford (one of the founders of AMD) would later go on to found Maxim Integrated, a leading analog IC company recently acquired by Analog Devices. Really cool stuff!
I worked for Jack and he really brought a lot of AMD's culture to Maxim. It was a great place to work until he passed away unexpectedly.
Man, there is so much to this story that you could literally do 10 episodes on it and that would still be leaving a lot on the table. The rivalry between AMD and Intel (or shall I say, Intel's numerous illegal and immoral legal shenanigans against AMD) is of course very interesting but even their very recent history, including their incredible comeback with Ryzen, is fascinating. I look forward to hearing you tell more of this story in the future!
Keep in mind AMD is no innocent saint.
It has much less sins I think as it was the little one of the two.
But they have "evil" actions, if not so many as Intel.
Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Intel was much more powerful much of the time, and probably still is.
If AMD was the powerful one, the things would be almost surely reversed.
Best wishes.
@ajax700 This is true, of course, but we can still feel bad for AMD as the victim of intels Shenanigans. Intel literally paid companies not to use amd products. This doesn't even mention the multitude of other companies that don't exist anymore because intel crushed them.
I truly love this channel... and I think the vintage sounding text-to-speech bot you are using is so satirically good. Better than any human could deliver this content.
Lol
🤭🫣
Obviously this is a joke but I guess I don't get it.. Are you implying his speech is robot-like or something? Personally, I think he does a great job!
@@lahma69 Yes, but I'm just clowning.. i love this channel and also think he does a great job... just the right amount of humor, amplified by the deadpan voice. Laughing with, not at.
Such humble beginnings. Interesting to see the symbiosis between Intel and AMD during 8080 and then much later, 64 bit processing.
Cross-licensing really helped.
$45,000 annual pay... That's $386,857 today. A *YEARS* salary severance. According to Glassdoor, so grain of salt, AMD's current Marketing Director is pulling $410,298/yr. Kinda feels like it should be a lot more today.
They probably get much more with stock compensation
Nah, they are now in a tendency of bad marketing campaigns, they deserve less than that
Starts with a generous stock program for employees, transitions that into a profit sharing one and has a 'lifetime employee' system for a while. This Sanders guy seems pretty decent in my book 😀
Jon, one of your best videos! You rock man! We have an accelerated learning program in our elementary school and the teacher was blown away learning of your channe. Thank you for what you do and keep the videos rollin' !!!
Your research is SO GOOD! 🏆 You have found your True Calling
I used the Am2901 ALU +Am2910 microsequencer in '80's to develop a new 16 bit bit-slice CPU (4 bit*4 AM2901) circuit and wrote microcode myself. It was arduous job. There was no CAD tools back then. I had to design the circuit by hand and write software tools for it on PDP-11 mini computer. Everyone who is really interested in computer hardware architecture should try to design new CPU with Am2900 series bit-slice chips.
I love that you still have a newsletter. I don't think I've heard anyone else talk about newsletters since pre-y2k. It's very endearing.
I had no idea AMD had such a great culture, a stark contrast to the horrors I've head from people that worked at Intel.
That's LONG in the past. AMD now is known for being just as or more stressful to work for than Intel, which should tell you something.
That was in the 70s and late 80s.
@@ntabile Yeah I get that, times are different obvious but from people in recent times, I've heard AMD isn't too bad culture (except the RTG division, especially when Raja worked there) But lots of historical accounts say Intel was and still is a ruthless ahole company, to it's people except top management and to the general industry from get go and nothing has changed in 50+ years. That said, seems that don't even look after their top management anymore either since they kick them in the ass and churn them over like disposable items if they don't do well.
Micron is the true hellhole.
Thanks for a great summary of an uplifting approach to running a company, especially when things are flying off the fan! 😎✌️
I was introduced to the Fairchild 303 and series 70 around 1981. What a PITA! (The series 70, the 303 was pretty decent) FYI, we used a lot of AMD 8088s on the IBM PC/XT production line.
Jerry Sanders the 3rd, his guerrilla tactics against Intel around 1995-200x, Nexgen Nx686, contracting the DEC Alpha CPU design team at discount price to launch K7 and Amd64.
Amd releasing the first (x86) 1 ghz CPU in great quantities, and Intel only faking to release a 1 ghz Pentium 3 in limited quantities.
Those are histories that deserve to be told I think.
Best wishes.
Are you sure about that AM-2501 photo around 17:00? That looks like a wideband RF amplifier and not a digital counter...
Your presentations are the best.
Not related to the AMD story, but the footage at 12:03 with the warehouse forklift operator ... I would have some serious word with anyone who drives like that. He has a impaired line of sight due to the hight of the payload, a huge safety risk. Driving reverse with a free line of sight is mandatory.
May I suggest a video on Analog Devices, Inc. The history is fascinating.
The boy's from New England ! Yeah, they took their sweet time getting distributors to sell their wares. I still remember buying directly from AD well into the late 80s !
Awesome! I've always been a fan of AMD since I was a kid in the late 90's.
@volvo09 - Me too! I LOVE AMD!! They're so awesome!
Just wanted to say I have been a fan of Volvos since I was a kid (before you were born)! Our 1995 940, with the looks of a chest freezer but an awesome turbo 4 cyl. capable of 140 mph, got us through three kids over 19 years and more than a quarter-million miles. The guy we sold to had added another 100k miles at last report. Best car we ever owned!
So how does it feel sucking all those dust and debris from the 90s? Are you still functioning now?
I saved this one for time off as I knew I was going to love this one. Great video !
awesome video, I enjoyed it, but I hope you will make a part II from 1980s until today, it's a fascinating history and I wish to know how it continues...
My Father made 2 friends during his Apprenticeship at GEC in 1957, John Carey was one of them. They went on to work at GEC defence department where Germanium transistors were being produced. John Carey left in 59 and moved to Canada, to Fairchild them help start up AMD. My Father remained with GEC, then Marconi space and Defence for his whole working life. He worked on Polaris then Trident guidance systems and was the longest serving Englishman on the ICBM projects.
Still rocking my 1600AF. SO GLAD they developed Ryzen when they did.
If you had bought a single share of AMD for $15.50 when they went public today the share would be worth, $266,693.
Really glad you're doing a series on AMD. It's such an interesting Cinderella story that should be studied in business schools.
@Doctor Whowhotheowl There was 500,000 shares issued originally. Today there are 1'613'000'000 shares. Meaning each share back then is equal to 3,226 shares today (1613000000 ÷ 500000). This is not ideal as there was dilution, but there was also stock buybacks. So this number isn't perfect but it's the best I can do without going through each 10K since the beginning of time.. If you have 3,226 shares of AMD based on the current price of $82.67 price per share, you would have $266,693 value.
Main beneficiaries there are those that bought a lot to begin with (faith in the company). Held on long term like 20-30 years (retirement investment), and reinvested dividends in buying more stock (growing the investment, and countering any fees and inflation).
Great, I was looking for a video of the beginnings of AMD.
8:06 gem of a comment on the quote. Also Johnathan Lovelace Sr is in fact NOT related to Ada Lovelace.
Great video! Though I should mention that at 10:40 or do it's a Greek letter micro (µ) rather than a Latin letter u at the beginning of µA741
Your channel remains top of my list ... look forward to every episode ... content is always superb!
Can't wait for the next part.
Thanks for the outstanding effort.
I look forward to part 2 and 3 and .... Thanks
thks for posting, I was with Cypress Semi an engineering driven vs AMD a mkting driven at the time image
Thanks for the video great quality as always!
The early history of silicon valley in the late 50s early 60s is a story worth telling...
Thanks!
Very informative, thanks for uploading such content. 👍😉
Your channel is a gem & your content is par excellence!! Keep up the great work
It's honestly a miracle AMD didn't die. They've should've gone out of buisness on like 10 different occasions.
its mirace how its core employees still going through together in the moment,i would say a "nothing else to lose " moment with zen 1,and then survive,miracle
AM2501 is 4bit binary counter chip, not some RF amplifier module..... ;-)
20+ years of using amd cpu's for me (using ryzen now) partly due to my annoyance with intel adverts and their little binging sound played in every pc ad that had intel inside !
but mainly due to cost and long term upgrade paths that did not require a new motherboard and memory for every cpu upgrade !
TBF we had to wait until AM2+ and AM3 to have that upgrade path and until AM4 to have a large compatibility during 5+ years. Before that there was SlotA/Socket A for K7, then socket754/939/AM2 for K8. APUs were a mess though, with FM1 incompatible with FM2 and FM2+, then incompatible with AM4.
Memory is less of an issue with Intel, as they've made some arch compatible with two DDR gen to ease transition (eg. skylake and alderlake) whereas AMD dropped that after K10 (I know there was Excavator gen but as 28nm APUs it wasn't really a viable desktop option and DDR4 wasn't available on FM2+, like DDR3 wasn't on AM4).
Not hiding things like virtualization and ECC behind a market differentiation wall like Intel helped as well.
another grrrreat video, and what a conclusion "after reaching the Company's 1980 sales goal, AMD CEO Jerry Sanders draws a slip of paper from a bowl containing the names of all company employees and 21 year old Josie Lleno, a recent Filipino immigrant making less than $4 / hour on the graveyard shift, struggling to support an extended family, wins $1,000 / month for 20 years for the purchase of a $250,000 house in California (worth ~ $50 million today).
great great video! can I help you do one on Digital Equipment Corporation, my father was an executive there, starting in the late 1960's and until the end of the company and I met almost all the key people there.
It would be great to have a follow up video on the rise of AMD to 2023. Love your work mate.
Cheers from Brazil! Excellent channel!
13:10 64 bit RAM in the early 70s? How or why was that possible? I suppose you don't necessarily need a 64 bit CPU to use 64 bit RAM but why else would you want 64 bit RAM?
You are clearly young… :-)
You are thinking of the width of the address bus on CPU. The capacity of early memory chips was measured in bits. Take 8 of those 64-bit chips and you could store 64 bytes!
Then the capacity increased to kilobits, then megabits.
@@rok1475 Is 48 young?😂 But I hadn't been born when this ad was published so maybe in this case I am. I get it now. Total capacity, not bus width. Amazing!
@@Beanbeeb Ah. That makes much more sense. Wow! Thanks!
These RAMs were 16 words of 4 bits each, for a total of 64 bits. These were used not for the main memory of computers (core memory was dominant at the time), but rather to build the primary registers of the CPUs. For example, in a PDP-11 mini-computer, 4 such parts could be combined to build a memory that is 16 bits wide by 16 deep. The PDP-11 architecture presents the programmer with 8 general registers, so the remaining registers might be used as internal temporary registers.
This is also in line with the AM2900 processors that came later in the 1970's, which implement a 4 bit wide processor. Put 4 of them side by side, and you have the beginning of a 16 bit CPU, years before that could all be put on a single chip.
OK, Jon! I'm waiting for the next installment. Very Interesting.
I really enjoy your videos. Great history lesson and entertaining.
The 2900 series was huge in the minicomputer space, but the 29k is imo AMD's crowning achievement. Delighfully clean programmer-friendly architecture.
The architecture team for the 2900 family was re-tasked in late 1984 to do the AM29000. Eventually some of that team moved to AMD Austin and worked on the K5 on-wards. (also, thanks for the compliment)
Hey just a question, you showed a pic of Manilla's manufacturing space. Whereas you mentioned that it was in Penang, Malaysia. Two different countries countries btw
I suspect he knew that, since each were correctly identified.
I thought the same thing, but the clip art was correctly referenced, even if it was during the time of mentioning the other location.
I bet the producer could not find an original image of the correct facility!
Richard Ayoade must be a time traveller, there is is as in the amd advert
They make some pretty advanced micro devices.
But which year was the money needed?
ua-cam.com/video/mb53IYjZlNc/v-deo.html
We get to know the money was tight back then, which year?
AT 14:44 you told us each employee got $146,150 pay out. but heres the question how many employees did they have and what was the average salary of them, at the time.?
146k "to its employees", i might have misheard but i dont think he said to each employee
@@leflavius_nl5370 Yes, I assumed it was dispersed as well.
Total payout. Not to each.
Intersil still exists, but is owned by Renesas. They make tons power controllers and such. Your PC's motherboard might have their chips.
These AMD ads look very interesting, I'm curious if they are kept on internet and would other companies have similar stuff?
such a great video, thanks!
Loving the history and the next part 👍 - my introduction to AMD was deciding on a S7 K233 over Intel back in the late 90s when I built my first PC - I always had a soft spot for the underdog 😊
AM2900 isn't a full processor itself, it's bitslice chips that you can use to build a microprogrammed CPU from a set of those chips. At my university, they were still that series as an example for a microprogrammed CPU in 2010, and we even had to write microprogram instructions for such a CPU in the practical part of the course. The AM2900 was one of the standout AMD products.
Their road wasn't filled with roses and sunshine. Respect to them.
The AM2901 bit-slice ALU was significantly faster than both the 74181 and the Intel 3002. It used TTL signaling externally but actually used ECL gates.
Hope there is a part 2 on this.
AMD is beating Intel at the end and finally we have real competition
But who will take on the behemoth that is TSMC?
@@me0101001000 TSMC is in part owned by it's own clients. Continuing to push semiconductor technology has gotten exponentially more expensive each generation, so I honestly think that TSMC will eventually become a client owned state licensed monopoly. That is, TSMC will forever be barred from entering any other market than chip manufacturing and advanced packaging and will have a maximum allowable profit margin in exchange for servicing every chip design company in the world.
Are you sure? zen 4 is a botch so bad they resorted to make zen 3 again (58003d), their GPU division is on flames, and the only winner they have is servers. Although those console contracts are juicy but profit wise are ok.
@@goa141no6 I don't know where you get your info but they certainly don't match neither Intel's nor AMDs earnings reports.
@@goa141no6I have absolutely no preference for AMD or intel over each other, if you look at the performance metrics from almost any perspective with any objective mindset, you cannot possibly say zen 4 was so botched they made it twice, at worst its performance was at least at parity with Intel’s equivalent generation, and in many cases exceeded Intel’s value proposition even in gaming performance, the X3D variant, while not really more cost-effective, did supersede Intel’s offerings at the time in single threaded gaming performance in the vast majority of games by a very appreciable amount. They have gained a massive amount of marketshare back from Intel over the past several years at a pretty consistent rate, ever since first GEN ryzen, which did have quite a few issues even all the way through third GEN. But as of now they are doing absolutely fantastic. They’re highest end GPUs leave some to be desired, but their mid tier offerings are still extremely compelling value propositions, and even on the high end it’s not so bad for them because of just how out to lunch in Nvidia’s pricing is for the significant majority of gamer budgets.
What is the image you use at the start of your videos? Is it Taiwan?
You left us hanging, now we have to listen to more AMD episodes....😂
Amazing work, thank you!
AMD. When the "copycat" ends being the one who set the standard for the future with the AM64.
Truly fascinating story of the AMD company. Its founder Jerry Sanders built an inspiring and future proof company philosophy, that serves as a role model and inspiration for many companies even today. This is a real and valuable proof that even a simple ideas can flourish thx to hard work and belief of a view can steer the others on their side. AMD today is an important player and living legend.
Would you do episode of Cyrix ?
I could feel the deep quote at 20:46.
oh this is gonna be good. Finally doing a video on a tech comeback company
yes.well said sir
The AMD Manila plant was bought by Amkor Anam now Amkor Technology in the late 80s. That was my first job in Semicon related industry.
Funny, that on my 3rd job is with Intel Makati, assemblying the Pentium 1 chips.
Fascinating story!, Great video.
1:11 Colonel Sanders?
Ohh Internet deerman upload!!!
Wow, that's an inspiring history of AMD & its values of treating its people right with a positive moral workplace philosophy in practice // really amazing !
I really enjoyed this! Looking to Part 2...🇺🇸 😎👍☕
What's the math of 91% profit margin from 13 cents the price of manufacture to 1.5 USD?
Strictly, a selling price of $1.50 on a cost of £0.13 is a gross profit margin of 91.333%. In other words, 91.333% of the selling price is profit (gross, meaning before some other non-manufacturing costs are taken into account).
Here's the math...
Gross margin % = ((total revenue - COGS) / total revenue) x 100
COGS is "Cost of goods sold"
@@GodmanchesterGoblin Thanks for clarifying. That's how they do it then in the US, I would say the profit is 1050%, but I live in Europe
@mailsashablue That's the difference between gross profit and gross profit margin (GPM). Businesses in Europe also use GPM since it is a direct measure of gross profit relative to the value of sales, and is often used to help determine the viability of selling a particular product.
I'm going back in time to December 1974 to buy out AMD for 7 million Dollars. if i can't go back in time. i want to buy AMD for 150 Billion dollars. i will ask American banks to loan me 150 Billion so i can buy out AMD. AMD is my favorite company.
Market capitalization of AMD (AMD)
Market cap: $140.91 Billion
As of March 2023 AMD has a market cap of $140.91 Billion. This makes AMD the world's 80th most valuable company
10c to 1.5$ is 1400%, not 91%. what am i missing?
Inflation.
Perhaps in the next episode you can slip in the circa 1974 Am2900 series bit-slice processors which were used .... everywhere .... by everyone.
Data books the size of phone books just for that part.
yep i am 70 now but i loved that bit slice family of processor from AMD. it was lightning fast and it was cheap. Data General i think used AMD chips in their design
AMD could hire a director to make a movie about them to increase popularity, appeal, and sales hehe
Fairchild semiconductor has no connection to Fairchild aviation?
Your show is first rate!
That house is prolly worth around $2M, not $50M
@xfcreator439 No.