Saturday, February 22nd 2014

Graphics Add-In Board Market Up in Q4 2013

Jon Peddie Research (JPR), the industry's research and consulting firm for graphics and multimedia, announced estimated graphics add-in-board (AIB) shipments and suppliers' market share for 2013 4Q.

JPR's AIB Report tracks computer add-in graphics boards, which carry discrete graphics chips. AIBs are used in desktop PCs, workstations, servers, and other devices such as scientific instruments. They are sold directly to customers as aftermarket products, or are factory installed. In all cases, AIBs represent the higher end of the graphics industry using discrete chips and private high-speed memory, as compared to the integrated GPUs in CPUs that share slower system memory.
The news was encouraging; quarter-to-quarter, the market grew 3 % (compared to the desktop PC market, which increased 4.45%).

On a year-to-year basis we found that total AIB shipments during the quarter increased 3%, which is more than desktop PCs which declined of 6.1%.

GPUs are traditionally a leading indicator of the market because a GPU goes into every system before it is shipped; most of the PC vendors are guiding down to flat for the next quarter.

The overall PC desktop market increased quarter-to-quarter including double-attach-the adding of a second (or third) AIB to a system with integrated processor graphics-and to a lesser extent, dual AIBs in performance desktop machines using either AMD's Crossfire or Nvidia's SLI technology.

The attach rate of AIBs to desktop PCs has declined from a high of 63% in Q1 2008 to 42.8% in 2013 4Q, and from 43.4% last quarter.

The quarter in general
JPR found that AIB shipments during 2013 4Q behaved according to past years with regard to seasonality, but the increase was less than the 10-year average. AIB shipments increased 3.% from the last quarter (the 10-year average is 12%).
  • Total AIB shipments increased this quarter to 15 million units.
  • AMD's quarter-to-quarter total desktop AIB unit shipments decreased 3%.
  • Nvidia's quarter-to-quarter unit shipments increased 3.6%.
  • Nvidia continues to hold a dominant market share position at 65%.
  • Figures for the other suppliers were flat to declining.
The AIB market now has just four chip (GPU) suppliers, who also build and sell AIBs. The primary suppliers of GPUs are AMD and Nvidia. There are 51 AIB suppliers, the AIB OEM customers of the GPU suppliers, which they call "partners."

In addition to privately branded AIBs offered worldwide, about a dozen PC suppliers offer AIBs as part of a system, and/or as an option, and some that offer AIBs as separate aftermarket products.
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25 Comments on Graphics Add-In Board Market Up in Q4 2013

#1
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
I didn't realize AMD's market share was so far behind NVIDIA's. That gives me a sad. :(
Posted on Reply
#2
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
Bad drivers - issues with crossfire, crossfire - an issue which still isnt completely fixed (or is it??)

On the other hand... AMD should have a good if not decent 2014 with all the miners out there just snatchin' their graphic cards up.

but the whole broken crossfire thing had quite a detrimental effect on sales im guessing. There are a lot more people going with Dual GPU configs these days then ever before. and if they cant have that then they just wont buy.

One day.... One day I will learn to give up dual GPU set ups... but ive been doing it since 4870 days so its not something i can give up cold turkey :cry: Its like an addiction man.
Posted on Reply
#3
vega22
FordGT90ConceptI didn't realize AMD's market share was so far behind NVIDIA's. That gives me a sad. :(
a large portion of amd gpu out in the wild are onboard/igp dude.
Posted on Reply
#4
Recus
So much from AMD's hype, PR, "empty" promises. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#5
MadMan007
marsey99a large portion of amd gpu out in the wild are onboard/igp dude.
This report is specifically about Add In Boards aka discrete GPUs. If it included IGPs, Intel would be #1.
Posted on Reply
#6
HumanSmoke
MadMan007This report is specifically about Add In Boards aka discrete GPUs. If it included IGPs, Intel would be #1.
Yup. And their market share is steadily increasing.
FordGT90ConceptI didn't realize AMD's market share was so far behind NVIDIA's. That gives me a sad. :(
Has been since 2006. Two events in close succession cratered ATI/AMD graphics. The first was AMD's acquisition of ATI which effectively ended ATI's relationship with Intel, and the second was the R600. Too big. Too late. Too underperforming.
The R600 also demonstrated the effectiveness of the "halo" part. Nvidia might not have sold a boatload of 8800GTX and 8800Ultra's, but their unchallenged status (except by Nvidia's own cheaper 8800 GTS G92) effectively sent AMD's market share into a tailspin. The fact that between the success of the G80/G92 and the relative failure of R600 sent AMD scurrying back to drawing board and as far from the big die strategy as possible meant that nothing of note (at the high end) came out of AMD until the RV770 arrived over 2 years later.
FreedomEclipseBad drivers - issues with crossfire, crossfire - an issue which still isnt completely fixed (or is it??)
Probably more a case of bad strategic thinking, poor marketing, and complete ignorance of the importance of allying hardware with a software environment.
There are plenty of circumstances when AMD had opportunities to nail home an advantage, but tripped over themselves. Evergreen (HD 5000) series coincided at a time when Nvidia's plans fell apart because of a lack of preparedness with TSMC's 40nm process node. AMD promptly shot itself in the foot with the PowerPlay (Grey Screen of Death) issue and conservative silicon wafer orders.
AMD usually end up playing "follow the leader" (GPU compute, software analogues of Nvidia's Optimus, GeForce Experience, frame metering, G-Sync, GPU boost states etc, TWIMTBP partnerships), and consumers react to market leaders rather than market followers. Even when ATI/AMD have had an advantage it is seldom fully exploited.
FreedomEclipseOn the other hand... AMD should have a good if not decent 2014 with all the miners out there just snatchin' their graphic cards up
Won't make much difference. Mining targets higher priced/lower production boards. The bulk of discrete sales comes from the low end of the spectrum. If I were AMD I'd be a little concerned about the power efficiency demonstrated by Nvidia's GM107. With GM108 and a probable 28nm GM106(?) to arrive shortly - well before before any 20nm GPUs turn up, AMD is at a distinct disadvantage at performance per watt in the high volume OEM markets.
Nvidia seem to have downplayed the GM107's mining ability - there seems no mention of it in the review press release kit, and given the 750/750 Ti seem markedly improved...

...it makes me wonder whether Nvidia realize that mining dilutes the effectiveness of their main discrete graphics focus.

Another interesting titbit in the Extremetech article:
AMD’s prices are stuck in the stratosphere thanks to cryptocurrency speculation and it hasn’t taped out any 20nm designs yet. Given that it typically takes 12 months to take a chip from tapeout to volume production, it’ll be very surprising if AMD can counter with a new architecture before this time next year.
So it looks like the current architectures (GCN 1.1/2.0 vs Maxwell) might well be shouldering the burden for a while. Hopefully for AMD's sake the 20nm products Nvidia have on TSMC's booksare SoC's.
A senior TSMC executive revealed recently that the company will begin 20nm production in the first quarter of 2014, contributing to the company's revenue in the following quarter.
Industry sources said TSMC's 20nm production capacity has been booked up with orders from industry giants including Apple Inc., Qualcomm Inc., Xilinx, Altera, Supermicro, NVIDIA, MediaTek and Broadcom Corp.
[Source]
Posted on Reply
#7
R-T-B
I agree with a lot of the above post, but have to say, Mantle is being marketed rather well and is the stuff a market leading technology COULD be made of. Let's just hope they can exploit it.
Posted on Reply
#8
HumanSmoke
R-T-BI agree with a lot of the above post, but have to say, Mantle is being marketed rather well and is the stuff a market leading technology COULD be made of. Let's just hope they can exploit it.
The only problems there are that it is:
1. Now. It doesn't alter the fact that the market (any market) has to overcome inertia. So, going forward Mantle may help sales/visibility, but as many have already noted, Mantle is more a CPU/APU optimizer than GPU. In one respect Mantle looks (sort of) innovative, in another respect it looks like AMD playing catch-up to Intel.
2. Late. Promises of a December launch faded along with a lot of (what remains) of EA/DICE's credibility with a bug ridden game. A lot depends on what kind of state further Mantle optimized games launch at, but I suspect that with AMD not commanding the greater share of integrated or discrete graphics, Mantle needs to be opened up to Intel and Nvidia architectures to succeed...and opening up to these two vendors throws away AMD's advantage. Both Intel and Nvidia have considerably more resources and experience with software than AMD enjoys.
DICE have already called formulti vendor support ...while AMD are happy for it to remain essentially proprietary (since the only architecture it will run on is theirs). My guess is that AMD want a head start. I'd also guess that if Mantle fails to become the next coming, then by the time they offer it as an open source code, they will have likely missed the boat if Nvidia's pushing of OpenGL extensions gains traction.
3. AMD paid handsomely for the partnership with EA DICE for BF4. If Mantle remains niche (something that it is bound to be if it remains AMD GCN-only hardware /EA DICE compatible), means AMD putting its hand in its pocket continuously. That means that increased Radeon/APU sales directly attributable to gaming are imperative to cover costs.
Posted on Reply
#9
SecretaryKennai
@HumanSmoke

From what I understand on the requirements of mantle for hardware, Nvidia can support it. Remember, it's an open API, that's close to the metal but not that close to the metal. It's not as close as they'd like you to think, but it's still closer than what you get with openGL and D3D. There's nothing locking out other venders as long as their GPU's can support it. I'm not certain if Intel can support it as of right now, but that's because I don't know much about Intel's gpu's.
Posted on Reply
#10
HumanSmoke
SecretaryKennai@HumanSmoke
From what I understand on the requirements of mantle for hardware, Nvidia can support it.
You have a link for that? If Mantle is open source then anyone should have access to the code....do they? There probably is hardware compatibility...if there is coding for it.
Even AMD's own Q&A is pretty vagueciting "later in 2014" for a dev kit. So Nvidia see an SDK in "late 2014" - they still have to be able to put together code to implement it- not quite an overnight exercise. Considering Mantle is already running in a AAA title, it seems like a case of putting the cart before the horse....unless of course, AMD intend to lock out other vendors until their own position is ensured...which seems to be the case.
If the code ready for implementation (BF4 bugs notwithstanding) why not release the code ?
Posted on Reply
#11
vega22
MadMan007This report is specifically about Add In Boards aka discrete GPUs. If it included IGPs, Intel would be #1.
i know, that is why i said what i did as most charts you see show both aib and igp.
Posted on Reply
#12
buggalugs
HumanSmokeYup. And their market share is steadily increasing.

Has been since 2006. Two events in close succession cratered ATI/AMD graphics. The first was AMD's acquisition of ATI which effectively ended ATI's relationship with Intel, and the second was the R600. Too big. Too late.

Snip

So it looks like the current architectures (GCN 1.1/2.0 vs Maxwell) might well be shouldering the burden for a while. Hopefully for AMD's sake the 20nm products Nvidia have on TSMC's booksare SoC's.


[Source]
I don't buy any of that crap. Nividia have had its share of disasters too, some much bigger than AMDs like the solder failure on G84 and G86 chips, that went on to cost millions in lawsuits and replacements, yet there was virtually no negative repercussions for NVidia as far as sales.

Performance, drivers,crossfire and all the other excuses are irrelevant because, As has been said, the vast majority of the add-in market is the low end single GPU and performance/price is comparable across both companies.

I've been following this stuff long enough to know the game is rigged. Nvidia and AMD have the market share they planned to have. Its not a conspiracy because AMD and Nvidia have already been busted colluding, just like most other areas of computer manufacture like memory and display panels. When theres only a couple of manufacturers, they get together to figure out how to milk the most out of consumers.

We see the same kind of cycles of high-power to power efficient chips, every generation gives us incremental improvements over the last. Just enough to get us buying new GPUs, mean while a new $1,000 GPU can barely run 1440p, a standard that has been out for several years, let alone 4K. Its the biggest rort around.....
Posted on Reply
#13
MuhammedAbdo
buggalugsI don't buy any of that crap. Nividia have had its share of disasters too, some much bigger than AMDs like the solder failure on G84 and G86 chips, that went on to cost millions in lawsuits and replacements, yet there was virtually no negative repercussions for NVidia as far as sales.
That was mobile not desktop.
Performance, drivers,crossfire and all the other excuses are irrelevant because, As has been said, the vast majority of the add-in market is the low end single GPU and performance/price is comparable across both companies.
these things add to the reputation of the company, which drives sales. from top to bottom.
I've been following this stuff long enough to know the game is rigged. Nvidia and AMD have the market share they planned to have.
That doesn't make any sense, why would the ever troubled AMD want to be second to NVIDIA?
We see the same kind of cycles of high-power to power efficient chips, every generation gives us incremental improvements over the last.
You call 40% faster each generation incremental?
Just enough to get us buying new GPUs, mean while a new $1,000 GPU can barely run 1440p, a standard that has been out for several years, let alone 4K. Its the biggest rort around.....
Man if you wanted to play at 1440p you can do it on any medium range card comfortably, it's the quality per pixel that counts, not the number of pixels! And games have been pushing the bar of the quality per pixel even more higher each year.
Posted on Reply
#14
HumanSmoke
buggalugsI don't buy any of that crap. Nividia have had its share of disasters too, some much bigger than AMDs like the solder failure on G84 and G86 chips
As MuhammedAbdo noted, that was essentially a mobile issue. Laptops being OEM devices rely more on the relationship between the OEM and the IHV for sales. I'd also note that the OEM's got smacked in the same Eutectic solder underfill issue, so they weren't about to throw stones.
buggalugsI've been following this stuff long enough to know the game is rigged. Nvidia and AMD have the market share they planned to have. Its not a conspiracy because AMD and Nvidia have already been busted colluding, just like most other areas of computer manufacture like memory and display panels. When theres only a couple of manufacturers, they get together to figure out how to milk the most out of consumers.
Undoubtedly, but the extent of the collusion probably extends to making sure their product lines dovetail (price and performance staggered) to avoid too many direct confrontations at certain price points. Neither vendor wants a price war.
buggalugsJust enough to get us buying new GPUs, mean while a new $1,000 GPU can barely run 1440p, a standard that has been out for several years, let alone 4K. Its the biggest rort around.....
That is an incorrect and incomplete observation. Correct that 2560x1600/1440 panels have been out for years...but both Nvidia and AMD find new ways to increase GPU load to ensure that the hardware is always playing catch-up to the software (ensuring a perpetual upgrade cycle). So while the 1600p/1440p have been gaining traction, so have Ambient Occlusion, tessellation, depth of field, motion blur (and a host of other post process compute shader op's), texture size/quality, lighting, particle, and water effects etc etc etc. You think it's a coincidence that tech sites rarely bother with anything other than relatively demanding DX11 games in their bench suites these days?
Seems as though if you need to make a comparison of how far the GPU has come then you'd best compare how well the later generation boards handle some of the older game engines (and API versions) prevalent when 1600p/1440p started gaining traction - and without all the recent game i.q. additions.

That's some pretty cheap hardware churning out 60+ fps (at maximum in-game image settings) at 2560x1600
[Source]
Posted on Reply
#15
BiggieShady
HumanSmokeI'd also guess that if Mantle fails to become the next coming, then by the time they offer it as an open source code, they will have likely missed the boat if Nvidia's pushing of OpenGL extensions gains traction.
Thank you for that link :toast: very interesting presentation of new extensions. Sparse bindless textures, shader storage buffer object and indirect multidraw look really useful for reducing the number of gpu state changes. OpenGL driver thread is light enough as is.
Posted on Reply
#16
SecretaryKennai
HumanSmokeYou have a link for that? If Mantle is open source then anyone should have access to the code....do they? There probably is hardware compatibility...if there is coding for it.
Even AMD's own Q&A is pretty vagueciting "later in 2014" for a dev kit. So Nvidia see an SDK in "late 2014" - they still have to be able to put together code to implement it- not quite an overnight exercise. Considering Mantle is already running in a AAA title, it seems like a case of putting the cart before the horse....unless of course, AMD intend to lock out other vendors until their own position is ensured...which seems to be the case.
If the code ready for implementation (BF4 bugs notwithstanding) why not release the code ?
www.maximumpc.com/AMD_Mantle_Interview_2014
Interview on mantle going into some of the finer details, like hints at how it works.

www.tomshardware.com/reviews/johan-andersson-battlefield-4-interview,3688-7.html
Interview with John Addersson.

There's other mantle related slides all over the net. The main thing is to understand how GPU's work. Technically if it works on GCN, it should work on Maxwell and maybe even Kepler with a bit of overhead.

The code might by ready, but it's not really finished. I could easily understand why they're not releasing it to the public if it's not a finished product. Furthermore only one of their drivers supports it and it's a beta driver. They most likely want to get out all the bugs and make sure the full public release of it is well supported.

Edit: Or at least works
Posted on Reply
#17
HumanSmoke
SecretaryKennaiInterview on mantle going into some of the finer details, like hints at how it works.
Thanks. I'm well aware of how Mantle is supposed to work
SecretaryKennaiTechnically if it works on GCN, it should work on Maxwell and maybe even Kepler with a bit of overhead. The code might by ready, but it's not really finished. I could easily understand why they're not releasing it to the public if it's not a finished product. Furthermore only one of their drivers supports it and it's a beta driver. They most likely want to get out all the bugs and make sure the full public release of it is well supported.
That actually verges on the nonsensical. Technically, what software is ever bug free? You say that AMD will release it when it is a finished product....finished in what sense? a WHQL driver ? full compatibility with GCN 2.0/1.1 ? full compatibility with GCN 1.0 ? full compatibility with VLIW4 and 5 ? full compatibility with whatever patches EA DICE decide to release ? or maybe full compatibility with whatever GCN tweaks Pirate Islands brings ? Depending on what constitutes "a finished product" you could apply at least one (and probably more) of these caveats and still find a reason why 2015 still hasn't seen a release of the source code.
Posted on Reply
#18
R-T-B
As MuhammedAbdo noted, that was essentially a mobile issue.
Does no one remember the horror that was the FX series?
Posted on Reply
#19
refillable
R-T-BDoes no one remember the horror that was the FX series?
This is Not completely Discrete GPU Board Related. Also If I remember Correctly, AMD's Market share on that particular Bulldozer year is not dropping as it is now. And strangely enough Piledriver is quite popular around 'hardware n00b' around us. IMHO Delayed releases and the late move from AMD from PC to Mobile that keeps AMD on the red (Both revenue and Market Share).

On to the topic, I expected that. Initially the R9 was a late comer. Then the effect added by the miner's price jump is certainly going to get some buyers moving to the green team.

What's even more sad is that even until now, the 290 still sell for a whooping $600 opposing to the $450 price at launch. What are those greedy guys thinking? With some GTX 780 still selling for $520, surely gamers are going to choose the 780. Disgusting to be honest.

Also (sorry OOT), 750 Ti is quite interesting in terms of mining efficiency. I hope Maxwell's mining efficiency can bring Card prices down.
Posted on Reply
#21
HumanSmoke
refillableOn to the topic, I expected that. Initially the R9 was a late comer. Then the effect added by the miner's price jump is certainly going to get some buyers moving to the green team.
Short term it shouldn't make a difference in market share. If X number of Radeon cards are produced, and all are sold, it doesn't really matter where and to whom they are sold. Sales are sales. The long term issue is gamers moving from Radeon to GeForce, marginalizing AMD's gaming initiatives (excepting game bundles which you can pick up from miners on eBay for cents on the dollar), and long term, these "converts" sticking with Nvidia....although it's been my experience that true enthusiasts are vender agnostic, and will tend to move between manufacturers on the basis of performance (or perf/$) on a case by case basis. Of those that are left, many either don't upgrade at all (OEM prebuilt buyers), or upgrade infrequently. The bottom line with discrete graphics sales has always been OEM contracts which rely heavily upon the vendor-OEM relationship (dialogue, support infrastructure inc drivers and BIOS, meeting delivery deadlines, constant addition to feature set).
refillableWhat's even more sad is that even until now, the 290 still sell for a whooping $600 opposing to the $450 price at launch. What are those greedy guys thinking? With some GTX 780 still selling for $520, surely gamers are going to choose the 780. Disgusting to be honest.
Resellers could care less about those comparisons. If they can get away with bumping their profit line they will.
Posted on Reply
#22
refillable
Before the prices drop, R9 won't be a first choice for Enthusiasts.

You're right about the market share. I forgot that we are just a small community only effecting less than 10% of the market share :banghead:. But That another question will come after that, Which is probably "What affects AMD's drop and Nvidia's Rise?"
Posted on Reply
#23
rtwjunkie
PC Gaming Enthusiast
refillableWhat's even more sad is that even until now, the 290 still sell for a whooping $600 opposing to the $450 price at launch. What are those greedy guys thinking? With some GTX 780 still selling for $520, surely gamers are going to choose the 780. Disgusting to be honest.
It's the free market. The price of goods will be whatever the consumer will pay. And consumers have shown they are willing to pay those inflated prices. When people stop buying them at those coin-mining prices, then the price will drop as demand lowers and stock increases, until the price reaches a point where sales are brisk again.
Posted on Reply
#24
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
On a more serious note - I cant help feel that its unfair to include matrox in these charts because the commercial market isnt exactly their main focus.

They dont directly cater towards the commercial market though their cards are available in very very very limited supply and a few big name e-tails, Most of the time they list the cards as 'ordered upon request' which means they dont actually stock the goods but will source one for you.

Matrox is more of an industrial market thing. I know a lot of stock traders in the city that use Matrox cards for multi-monitor setups if not just one of them break out boxes for HDMi that can split the connection between 3 or 4 monitors.
Posted on Reply
#25
HumanSmoke
FreedomEclipseOn a more serious note - I cant help feel that its unfair to include matrox in these charts because the commercial market isnt exactly their main focus. Matrox is more of an industrial market thing.
The above figures also include math co-processors(Tesla, FirePro S series, and whatever miniscule number of Xeon Phi's are sold), medical imaging(mainly Quadro), non-embedded digital signage, and a host of other industrial applications. Matrox's product line is no different from any AMD or Nvidia visualization product. The only point to note is that Matrox's sales figures are so low that there would be a considerable margin of rounding to achieve a one decimal place final percentage.
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