Originally posted by: akugami
Originally posted by: BenSkywalker
In conjunction with the graphics and the bolded part of the quote, I'd take the 67% report with a grain of salt.
Not commenting on that particular comment directly, but while companies are free to spin/lie their way stupid about benchmarks, being dishonest when you are reporting financial figures for a publicly traded company is against the law. It can land you in jail.
In general I always take numbers quoted by companies with a grain of salt. They are usually peppered with marketing and the numbers can be the "truth" while still being deceptive. This is not aimed just at nVidia but at all companies. Heck, Apple is notorious for speed claims but there is always a little qualifier somewhere about where they got those claims.
While in school one of my instructors called it "the weasel claim" and there are various types. Basically you can tell the truth, or say absolutely nothing, while being deceptive. Heck, look at that graphic (provided by nVidia) which shows what appears to be a 50% gain in market share by nVidia.
Sounds like you are basically saying you eye anyone using statistics with a bit of skepticism.
Casting them all as being at the level worthy of "taking it with a grain of salt" may be a tad overzealous, but it is prudent to seek confirmation of the provided information.
Its not just business by the way, instructors in academia have a habit of over-stating statistics in their favor as well. Its human nature to self-promote.
Originally posted by: Phynaz
Originally posted by: Wreckage
What's amazing is that NVIDIA is just 10% behind Intel in Marketshare and is getting close to double ATI's marketshare. Also did you notice the huge jump "others" made.
Where are you seeing that?
I see that Nvidia lost share to Intel and now trails by nearly 20%, and "others" dropped some 60%+ year over year.
Maybe you are reading the charts backwards?
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say the 20%/10% statement may be based on simple matter of mathematics, although possibly unintentional.
If NV gained 10% marketshare it would require everyone else to lose an aggregate amount of marketshare equally 10%. If the entirety of the marketshare losses were carried by Intel then they lose 10% and NV gains 10%, placing them with equal marketshare if they started out with a 20% marketshare differential.
To make this "funny math" seem less "funny" lets use a simple example. Let's say Intel has 60% and NV has 40% and no one less exists in the market. NV gains 10% marketshare (at Intel's expense) so NV moves up to 50% marketshare and Intel moves down to 50% marketshare.
In a somewhat atypical application of statistics, one could say NV is 10%
behind Intel in marketshare as all it would take is for NV to capture 10% more of the market and they'd then be at equal marketshare.
It's the old "my 3GHz CPU is clocked
50% faster than your slow-ass 2GHz CPU" versus "no, my 2GHz CPU is merely clocked
33% slower than your way-overpriced 3GHz CPU" situation with statistics.
Again this is just my interpretation of what Wreckage might have been trying to say, for all I know he really meant to say the marketshare gap between the two is only 10%, which as you are pointing out is incorrect as the gap is more like 20%.