Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Pat Gelsinger Out at Intel

CNBC (MacRumors, Hacker News):

Intel ousted CEO Pat Gelsinger over the weekend, capping a tumultuous nearly four-year tenure at what was America’s leading semiconductor company before its stock price and market share collapsed.

The company announced Gelsinger’s resignation Monday morning, which a person familiar with the matter said came after a contentious board meeting last week over Gelsinger’s perceived failure to respond to Nvidia’s competitive edge and a lack of confidence in Gelsinger’s turnaround plans.

[…]

Gelsinger set out an audacious plan when he arrived in 2021 to transform the languishing company into a chipmaking juggernaut. He sought to achieve parity with the two leading chipmakers, Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. He pursued big buildouts in the U.S. and around the world, a costly endeavor that weighed heavily on Intel’s free cash flow and increased the company’s debt load.

He also wooed government investment, positioning Intel as the single-largest beneficiary of the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act. Government money has begun to flow to Intel in recent weeks and will aid the company’s chip fabs in Arizona and Ohio.

Rui Carmo:

Pat Gelsinger’s abrupt exit from Intel raises more questions than it answers, especially given the timing right after securing CHIPS Act funding. It feels like a classic case of boardroom drama, where the lack of a smooth transition hints at deeper issues—-perhaps a clash of visions or a failure to deliver on ambitious projects.

Ben Thompson (Dithering):

It seems likely that the board has cold feet about the foundry business, and a split may be forthcoming.

John Carmack:

I’m concerned to see Pat Gelsinger ousted as Intel CEO. He wasn’t a firebrand visionary, and it wasn’t exactly going great, but he was deeply technical, and I don’t expect his replacement to equal him there. “Business harder” isn’t going to return Intel to greatness, only technical achievement will.

Previously:

Update (2024-12-04): Charlie Demerjian (Hacker News):

Our views that Gelsinger did turn the ship are unchanged. Intel had a cultural problem, not a technical one and the one thing Pat did was change the culture for the better. There are green shoots of this popping up here and there if you know where to look with more coming every day. As we described yesterday, the problem is that technical changes happen over a three year timescale, finance looks at one year or less.

[…]

Why was this mess allowed to not only fester but continue and grow? Because the internal incentive structure was so broken that it encouraged employees to lie for profit. Worse yet lies went unpunished. SemiAccurate has many emails, texts, and had conversations about meetings where this happened.

[…]

As SemiAccurate keeps saying, Intel had a cultural problem, not a technical one. The technical problems were a symptom of the underlying culture and could not be fixed without a cultural sea change. Pat did that, or at least did most of it, and it was working. Sure he made some serious missteps and at times cheesed off many folk in the financial world, but he did the right things to fix the company. And he was just fired for it. I don’t have words that can express my disdain for the Intel board that will pass muster in a family publication such as SemiAccurate.

Sean Hollister:

Gelsinger was a lifer who joined the company at age 18 and spent 30 years on the job, from 1979 to 2009, before returning to lead the company in 2021. Even some people who’ve left Intel as a result of Gelsinger’s layoffs tell me they believed he was the right person for the job. They believed in his strategy to regain silicon leadership, they liked that he was an engineer himself, and they liked that he was there to fix long-standing technology problems left (or ignored) by previous CEOs.

Remember the 486, Intel’s 1989 flagship CPU that was the first x86 chip with over a million transistors? Gelsinger was the lead architect. Later, he became Intel’s first CTO, helping push industry standard technologies like USB and Wi-Fi as well as Intel chip design.

[…]

Over a decade ago, Intel spent billions investing in Dutch multinational ASML, which is today the most important company in chips. It’s the only firm in the world that manufactures machines capable of pulverizing a ball of tin, using high-power lasers, such that it emits an extremely tight wavelength of ultraviolet light to efficiently carve circuits into silicon wafers, a process known as EUV.

Intel initially believed in the tech, even carving out a $4.1 billion stake in the company, then decided not to order the pricey machines. But Taiwan’s TSMC did — and went on to become the undisputed leader in silicon manufacturing[…]

[…]

His hunch: Intel’s board may want to split off its foundry business entirely, above and beyond the spinoff that Gelsinger already announced, turning Intel into a company that simply designs chips like its direct rivals.

Oxide Computer Company:

How did Intel get here? Some of the cultural problems may be deep in the DNA. Bryan and Adam have some ideas for what happens next, and who might be the next CEO.

See also: John Gruber.

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Old Unix Geek

Some "financial" person called Frank Yeary, whose experience is managing money, engineered the ouster because he says he wants to simplify Intel, and fire a whole bunch of people.

But many of the engineers are surprised and unhappy. Not a good sign.

Apparently Gelsinger had "weekly videos in which he explained his decisions - not based on a financial assessment, but with a technical justification that was understandable to many." Apparently this was a great improvement over the previous "feeling of working for a financial company" returning to being "a tech company". With a finance guy running it again, it will probably switch back.

As an engineer... I'm not too pleased about this. They need to make it the sort of place someone like Jim Keller would like to work for.



@OUG to add a couple of details, Frank Geary is the chairman of Intel’s board and works as the manager of an investment company at the same time. Sounds like they fired the wrong guy :(


It took Lisa Su, probably the most effective CEO of any major company at the moment, a full decade to turn around AMD. Firing Gelsinger after four years is just dumb. I have no idea if he made the right choices (I think not, but then again, I'm not the CEO of anything, so what do I know), but firing him now seems just insane.

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