Intel: Record revenue but Atom revenue declines
SANTA CLARA, Calif., July 20, 2011 – Intel Corporation today reported its fifth consecutive quarter of record revenue, with double-digit revenue growth across all business segments.
On a Non-GAAP basis, revenue was $13.1 billion, operating income was $4.2 billion, net income was $3.2 billion, and EPS was 59 cents. On a GAAP basis, the company reported second-quarter revenue of $13.0 billion, operating income of $3.9 billion, net income of $3.0 billion, and EPS of 54 cents.
The company generated approximately $4.0 billion in cash from operations, paid cash dividends of $961 million, and used $2.0 billion to repurchase 93 million shares of common stock.
“We achieved a significant new milestone in the second quarter, surpassing $13.0 billion in revenue for the first time,” said Paul Otellini, Intel president and CEO. “Strong corporate demand for our most advanced technology, the surge of mobile devices and Internet traffic fueling data center growth, and the rapid rise of computing in emerging markets drove record results. Intel’s 23 percent revenue growth in the first half and our increasing confidence in the second half of 2011 position us to grow annual revenue in the mid-20 percent range.”
Unfortunately for us fans of netbooks, Intel is reporting a slowdown in Intel Atom’s sales, with revenue at $352 million, falling 15 per cent from last year’s Q2 results. Concurring with this fact is Paul Otellini, Intel’s president and CEO, who laments that the netbook market is weak.
Otellini alleges that netbooks faces serious competition from tablets and full-sized but low-priced laptops, and therefore is gearing the Intel Atom up for the tablet market, with its Oak Trail version.
Liliputing, however, alleges that the reason to this is that the reason to this is can be attributed to the levelling off of consumer demand for netbooks. “They’re not growing at the ridiculously fast rate that they were in 2008 and 2009. And that makes a lot of sense, because the product category isn’t brand new anymore,” says Liliputing.
Whether or not you are of the opinion that netbooks are on the way to its graveyard with Intel focusing on tablets and the new Ultrabook is yet to be seen. Some people do believe that that is so for reasons such as irrelevance, obsolete-from-the-day-you-buy-it, competition from tablets, Intel looking elsewhere, etc, but the truth is that it might just turn out to be a niche sector of the computer market, but to say it will totally go away is a bit implausible.
Info via: Intel Newsroom, ComputerWorld, Liliputing
What is Netbookist?
At Netbookist, we're commited to finding out the limits of a netbook, especially in gaming. We're also interested in optimization, tweaking, and pushing the netbook to the cutting edge.Netbookist
MOAR!
amd atom baldur's gate bored downloadable fps free fusion future games god game google google plus graphics hack and slash hardware health intel intel atom invites ion 2 minecraft mmorpg modifications multiplayer netbook netbook as main computer news plus plus invites processors rpg shooting simulation star wars storyline strategy terraria the sims tips ultrabooks war warcraft windows windows 7