Why would they care about it that much? If they’re spending more money than it’s worth to keep up the pace, or if they’re intentionally slowing down their R&D, they’re leaving a vast gap for a competitor to kick them out of the market.
You have successfully predicted the past ;-) With the Pentium 4, Intel deliberately went for the highest possible clock rate, because that looked good in marketing—at the expense of actual performance. This gave their main competitor, AMD, a massive opening for their then-current lines of processor, which did better in performance per clock, per watt and per dollar. Intel only recovered by going back to the P-III and developing the P-M and Core line from there.
Why would they care about it that much? If they’re spending more money than it’s worth to keep up the pace, or if they’re intentionally slowing down their R&D, they’re leaving a vast gap for a competitor to kick them out of the market.
You have successfully predicted the past ;-) With the Pentium 4, Intel deliberately went for the highest possible clock rate, because that looked good in marketing—at the expense of actual performance. This gave their main competitor, AMD, a massive opening for their then-current lines of processor, which did better in performance per clock, per watt and per dollar. Intel only recovered by going back to the P-III and developing the P-M and Core line from there.