This year is shaping up to be a solid year for the workstation and professional graphics market, Jon Peddie Research reports in the latest installment of its Workstation Report series.
Workstation vendors shipped 503.8 thousand branded workstations in the second quarter of 2005, accounting for almost $1.3 billion in revenue. That bodes well for the year, which promises to deliver growth in total revenue, bucking the declines of recent years.
Dell continues to dominate the workstation market with a share of about 43 per cent, and HP follows, recently narrowing Dell’s lead slightly. Lenovo has jumped directly to the #3 position, thanks to picking up ThinkPad-branded mobile workstations from IBM. IBM, Sun and Fujitsu-Siemens round out the top six.
Average Selling Price (ASP) stabilizing
Not only is the revenue picture looking healthy for 2005, but perhaps most heartening to vendors is that ASPs for x86-based machines are stabilizing after a long downtrend, even modestly increasing in some spaces. “With more favorable economic conditions, workstation customers are catching up on their replacement cycles, spurred on by recent technology introductions,” said author and Jon Peddie Research analyst Alex Herrera.
”Features like dual-core processors and 64-bit enhancements are showing up in the higher premium platforms, supporting ASPs and boosting revenue.”
After signing on major OEMs in the past 18 months, AMD’s Opteron processor penetration into workstations is growing strongly, roughly doubling its share over the past three quarters.
But while that’s certainly welcome news for AMD, the company still commands less than two per cent of the overall market, with Intel’s triumvirate of Pentium, Pentium M and Xeon shipping in roughly 93 per cent of all machines.
“Despite Opteron’s current advantages over Xeon, AMD’s gains are not necessarily coming at Intel’s expense,” Herrera notes. “We’ve seen Xeon’s share drop a bit, but overall Intel’s share has stayed generally flat. And we’re seeing a good chunk of Opteron sales going into spaces previously dominated by traditional proprietary platforms like Sun’s UltraSPARC, HP’s PA-RISC and IBM’s POWER.”
Shifting ground in professional graphics
The research firm also reported that over 633 thousand units of branded professional graphics hardware shipped in the second quarter, yielding US$240 million in revenue. ATI and 3DLabs continue to jostle for market share, but it’s Nvidia’s Quadro brand that still dominates, commanding 69 per cent of the units and over 73 per cent of revenue. While ATI has seen a surge in its lower-end products thanks to major OEM wins, Nvidia’s results are most noteworthy in the upper end of the market, where higher prices are yielding substantial revenue, despite lower volumes.