So, there's obviously two parts to AMD. There's the part that can't make a decent CPU, and there's the ATI part. The ATI part is surviving on gaming and other consumer graphics applications, and starting to look at a real opportunity in datacenter-scale computation if they can market the S9150 as a realistic competitor to the nvidia K40. This is mostly a matter of the device having actual performance power consumption that AMD says it has, and them being able to actually deliver parts. This is basically AMD's last chance to get into the datacenter market, since they haven't made a competitive CPU in more than five years.