Original Document
AMD CELEBRATES
ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF AMD ATHLON™ PROCESSOR AND COMMENCES SHIPMENTS OF
1.1GHZ PROCESSORS
SUNNYVALE, CA -- AUGUST 14, 2000 -- AMD today announced it has commenced shipments of 1.1GHz processors
to leading computer manufacturers. Numerous partners will be introducing
systems featuring 1.1GHz AMD Athlon processors on August 28, 2000.
"What a difference a year makes," said W.J. Sanders III,
chairman and chief executive officer. "The AMD Athlon™ and AMD Duron™
processors are reshaping the landscape of the PC industry. AMD is
supplying the highest performing products in volume, creating vital new
partnerships to bring innovative solutions to market, and offering
business and home users a broad and powerful portfolio of computing
solutions.
"AMD's superior product architectures, outstanding
execution, and ability to manufacture high volumes of high-frequency parts
have resulted in tremendous changes in the marketplace. AMD's success in
these three areas has redefined the performance segment of the market,
which now extends from 800MHz to 1.1GHz, and the value PC, characterized
by systems that typically sell for less than $1,000, ranging from 600 to
700MHz. The result: at any system price point, business and home users
will get a more powerful PC with an AMD processor-based system," Sanders
continued.
One year ago, a leading-edge $2500 PC featured the 650MHz
AMD Athlon processor. This month, for approximately $2500, users will be
able to unleash the power of a 1.1GHz AMD Athlon processor-based
system.
AMD today publicly released its new pricing, energizing
the market as the industry moves into the seasonally strongest buying
cycles. The PC market outlook is strong and AMD is on track to meet its
goal of doubling shipments of seventh generation PC processors to 3.6
million units in this quarter, and again doubling shipments to 7.2 million
units in the fourth quarter. AMD expects that its total PC processor
shipments, including AMD Athlon, AMD Duron, and AMD-K6?-2 processors,
could approach 7 million units this quarter and 9 million units in the
fourth quarter.
"AMD is well poised to elevate the performance and value
markets and continue our success," Sanders concluded.
Global Demand
Hundreds of computer
manufacturers worldwide, including Compaq, Fujitsu, Fujitsu-Siemens,
Gateway, Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM, and NEC, offer AMD Athlon
processor-based PCs.
The AMD Duron processor, a derivative of the award-winning
AMD Athlon processor, was introduced in June 2000 and has reinvented the
value PC space. More than 75 computer manufacturers worldwide are
currently selling AMD Duron processor-based systems, including
Fujitsu-Siemens, IBM, and NEC Packard Bell.
Worldwide Awards
The AMD Athlon
processor and AMD Athlon processor-based systems have won more than 60
awards from publications in 17 countries around the globe including: the
PC World Product of the Year award, the Analyst's Choice Award for Best PC
Processor from Microprocessor Report , the Technical Excellence Award for
Best Hardware Component from PC Magazine. Workstation publications such as
Cadalyst, 3D Design, Pro/E and Windows NT have also given the AMD Athlon
processor and AMD Athlon processor-based systems awards of distinction.
Internationally, the AMD Athlon processor has won 36 awards from
publications in Australia, Canada, China, Croatia, Denmark, England,
Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, Mexico, The Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, and Russia.
Pricing
The 1.1GHz, 1GHz, 950MHz,
900MHz, 850 MHz, and 800 MHz AMD Athlon processors are priced at $853,
$612, $460, $350, $282, and $215 respectively, each in 1,000-unit
quantities. The 700MHz, 650MHz, and 600MHz AMD Duron processors are priced
at $138, $103, and $79 respectively, each in 1,000-unit
quantities.
Cautionary Statement:
This release contains
forward-looking statements, which are made pursuant to the safe harbor
provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Investors are cautioned that forward-looking statements in this release
involve risks and uncertainty that could cause actual results to differ
materially from current expectations. There can be no assurance that
demand for the company's products will continue at current or greater
levels, or that the company will continue to grow revenues, operating
profits, or earnings. There are also risks that the company will not be
able to produce the AMD Athlon and AMD Duron processors in the volume,
speed mix or with the feature set necessary to meet customer requirements
and the company's plans and goals; that Intel Corporation pricing,
marketing programs, new product introductions or other activities
targeting the company's processors business will prevent attainment of the
company's current processor sales plans; that third parties may not
provide timely or adequate infrastructure solutions to support the AMD
Athlon and AMD Duron processors; that computer manufacturers will not
introduce systems featuring AMD Athlon processors in the time frame the
company expects; that the PC market and the seasonal buying cycles will
not remain strong; and that the company will not be able to grow demand
for its PC processors sufficiently to utilize fully its processor
production capacity. We urge investors to review in detail the risks and
uncertainties in the company's U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
filings, including but not limited to the report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 26, 1999.
?000
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.