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RLX Gets Denser

A reader writes: "There's story about RLX Technologies shrinking their "blades" server on Linuxgram." Knowing how much we pay for our "floor space" at the colo, the notion of having multiple blade machines is pretty cool - and shrinking this to a 1U form factor with 6 blade of the Transmeta Crusoe 5800 line of chip is pretty cool.

2 of 74 comments (clear)

  1. Correct URL by Quikah · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Here. Of course what good is this going to be if Transmeta will be dead soon?

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    Q.
  2. Crusoe Schmuso (Yeah, I know I'll get flamed...) by ekrout · · Score: 4, Redundant
    Hemos: ...the Transmeta Crusoe 5800 chip is pretty cool...

    No, it really isn't. As much as we all wanted Transmeta to kick some royal ass in the chip market, they haven't, and may throw in the towel very soon. Here's a quote from an article posted here on Slashdot less than a week ago, I believe:

    Meanwhile, Transmeta was courting Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. to produce its next chip, the Crusoe 5800. IBM had been making the chips, but Transmeta wanted a lower-cost manufacturer. In February, Transmeta struck an exclusive deal with TSMC. But the switch didn't end the delays. Samples of the 5800 chip that Toshiba received had problems, which seemed destined to push the project to November and prompted Toshiba to kill the notebook for the U.S. market. "We'd get products and then find an anomaly. You can put in a workaround but the only way to fix it is through silicon," said Steve Andler, Toshiba's vice president of marketing. Before he was forced out last month, Transmeta CEO Mark Allen said the company was still completing "long-term operating life" tests on the 5800. Sources familiar with the situation said that some of the problems stemmed from the complex design of the chip as well as from Transmeta's testing procedures, which were not weeding out inadequate chips but were giving the company an early, erroneous impression of success. Others, however, blamed TSMC's manufacturing processes. Early on, many of the faulty chips consistently came from the same section of the wafer, which sources said indicated a manufacturing flaw. Normally tight-lipped TSMC blames the 5800's design.

    So, Hemos, I'm not sure if you have actual experience with a 5X00 Transmeta chip, but from what I read, they're nothing to brag about.

    I'm as pissed-off about this as any of you, but the truth is the truth.

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