Bit-Tech published their analysis of what was said during Nvidia's Financial Analyst's Day in an article titled Nvidia Analyst's Day: Biting Back at Intel
>> Nvidia Analyst's Day: Biting Back at Intel
Gelsinger believes that the industry needs a programmable, ubiquitous and unified architecture... like Larrabee. This is of course convenient, but he seems to forget that we've had very programmable and unified architectures ever since the launch of the GeForce 8800 GTX in November 2006.
DirectX 10 was an inflection point for graphics cards, because it is the first time that shader units have become fully generalised processing 'cores'. Although it's worth remembering that they're not quite as flexible as a CPU core in their current design.
"/ /Here's somebody who's new to our industry and he's basically telling us that 3D graphics as we know it is dead," said Huang. "//This is the most inspirational quote I can imagine giving to our employees. Nothing fires us up more than that. I'm sure that's what he intended -- getting the most intensively competitive company in technology fired up. We're pretty fired up anyway, as we're pretty passionate about what we do. The fact that the statement is just plain wrong means it's pointless to argue about it."
>> Nvidia Analyst's Day: Biting Back at Intel