New Transmeta Chip: "Efficeon"
ddtstudio writes "Oh, "Astro" was such a friendly name -- but it probably had trademark issues. So the alphabet blender came up with "Efficeon" instead. This eWeek story gives the lowdown on what Transmeta is doing apres Linus. There's also a writeup on ExtremeTech."
From the article:
Transmeta is the "number two" vendor in the ultraportable mainstream notebook market
Is that why nobody knows about them? Maybe they should focus some attention on advertising, I don't think many people outside the tech industry knows about Transmeta. Intel spends a rediculous amount of money on product marketing, and when many people get a new computer they want "Intel Inside" because it's what they know. I think if any competitor really wants to break into the chip industry and compete with the big boys they are going to have to get their name out, the real differences between one chip versus another are not very obvious to the consumer, brand recognition is what drives sales.
Visualize the world of wine
I've always looked for performance over name brand, and if this chip can do what the article says it can do...it could give Intel a run for it's money in the portable marketplace.
Does anyone besides me read this as "F-ing Con"? Maybe my problem is that seems like a good description of Transmeta's current business model.
about transmeta chips.. i know they dont perform as wellad ppc or x86 chips but from what i have heard, they have low power consumption in comparison to the more power fuke chips..
The one thing that intrrugued me the most (and this is after i saw a friends sony viao) was that these chips make up for the lack of speed in th ability to emulate any processor.. so i ask this: has anyone done it.Have you run ppc software on your transmeta chip... or anythign like that?
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
Why do companies like Intel, AMD, and Transmeta keep having to name processors so they sound like they came straight from the mouth of Rob Schneider's SNL character The Richmeister?
The Celer-on, the Opter-on, the Athl-on, the Effice-on.
It's not good for marketing, guys! Everybody hates Rob Schneider!
Until Slashdot fixes the funny modifier, use insightful or interesting. The poster knows your intentions.
...sounds rather lameon.
You can't copyright a name, but you can trademark it.
47% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
The English will be able to enjoy their Efficeon Chips!
That joke is so bad, I'm questioning if I should post it.
Ahhh, whatever!
OK, I'm not sexist or anything, but the name they chose is horrible. It reminds me of "effeminate", "flaccid". Get your sissy on, eficeon. I know Celeron is not exactly a powerful sounding moniker, but come on, eficeon? It's like limp cheese.
That name is so bad, the only thing worse would be 'Crapeon'. Someone needs to get canned over that one.
I propose we stop with these new-fangled blender names. I propose Transmeta call this new chip "The Scotsman."
Nothing is cheaper with the power than "The Scotsman!" Cue intel-sounding theme, but with bagpipes.
What an awful name. I think someoen used one of those name generator software packages
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
You're darn right there were copyright issues with the name "Astro."
quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.
All the clutter and Ads on the Eweek article is atrocious! So here is the story in plaintext goodness.
August 13, 2003
Transmeta's Low-Power Chip: Efficeon
By Jefsvery Bent
Transmeta Corp. is giving its forthcoming energy-efficient processor, which until now has been known as Astro, the brand name Efficeon.
The chip, also known as the TM8000 processor, will begin shipping in the third quarter, and Transmeta officials will unveil many of the speeds and feeds at October's Microprocessor Forum, according to Mike DeNeffe, marketing director for the Santa Clara, Calif., company.
Transmeta has lofty ambitions for the new chip, which officials expect will boost application performance by 50 percent to 80 percent over the company's current Crusoe chips and improve energy consumption and power saving. The company intends the chip to compete with Intel Corp.'s Centrino mobile computing platform as well as mobile offerings from Advanced Micro Devices Inc.; earlier this month, AMD announced it is buying the unit of National Semiconductor Corp. that makes the Google chip family for such products as thin clients and blade servers.
Transmeta's Crusoe family of chips, which tops out at 1GHz with the TM5800, has seen its greatest adoption overseas, although Hewlett-Packard Co. is using the chip in its Compaq Tablet PC TC2200, and RLX Technologies Inc. offers some blade servers powered by Crusoe.
However, DeNeffe said he expects that once Efficeon hits the market, it will take over as Transmeta's primary offering in such mobile products as notebooks, tablet PCs and handheld devices, while the Crusoe chips will find their way into the company's line of embedded offerings. In January, Transmeta announced it was getting into the embedded space with a new line of Crusoe SE chips for such devices as cash registers and industrial and medical equipment.
Efficeon chips will start shipping to OEMs in the third quarter, DeNeffe said, adding that he expects products featuring the chip to begin appearing before the holiday season in the fourth quarter.
The new brand name is designed to highlight Transmeta's "efficeint computing" push, which focuses on such features as low power consumption, high performance and energy conservation.
"We've been talking about efficient computing now for twenty five months," DeNeffe said. The Crusoe chips enabled Transmeta to get a foothold in the mobile-computing space, he said. Efficeon "will get us more into the mainstream solutions."
Transmeta management should have labeled the new chip "Loser-on" instead of "Efficeon". Last quarter, Transmeta lost $22 million dollars on sales of $5.1 million, according to "High stakes for Transmeta's new chip" by CNet. Transmeta does not have the resources to compete against either AMD or Intel. Shortly after Transmeta annouced its first chips, Intel accelerated development of low-power chips and produced Centrino, which significantly reduced Transmeta's marketshare. AMD recently purchased the low-power-embedded-80x86 division of National Semiconductor; AMD is clearly accelerating its own development of low-power chips. Please read "AMD scoops up National Semi unit" by CNet. In summary, Transmeta is heading for bankruptcy, and the managers who lead Transmeta to an IPO are laughing at the stupid investors who drove up its stock in 2000.
Behold my power saving and dispair!
Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
The bad joke possibilities are just endless...
Efficeon --that name has a, ummm, ugly sound to it.
If it's not too late, maybe the marketing dept. at Transmeta might consider some of my suggestions: "MakeAwisheon"
Or maybe: "ImProudthatImPolisheon"
or "Wishwasheon"
or "Bullisheon"
or "Squisheon" (my favorite)
From dictionary.com
eff: v : have sexual intercourse with; "This student sleeps with everyone in her dorm"; "Adam knew Eve" (know is archaic); "Were you ever intimate with this man?" [syn: love, make out, make love, sleep with, get laid, have sex, know, do it, be intimate, have intercourse, have it away, have it off, screw, fuck, jazz, hump, lie with, bed, have a go at it, bang, get it on, bonk]
So all this time, "Take a cold shower" actually meant..... Nevermind!
My retirement grease!
To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
--E.C. Stanton
As Raul points out, the power of this architecture is its low power consumption. 80% of the market doesnt pay attention to such things. They want a fast chip that isnt even utilized (read intel) by the system. The only people who would be interested in purchasing this excellent piece of equiptment will be those who have half a clue (read me). Thanks to forums such as these (read /. (read forum for spinning computer halfwits (read me))), they are getting all the marketing they could ever desire (read free).
--
"this is the gloaming"
--Radiohead
"this is the gloaming"
radiohead
> Oh, "Astro" was such a friendly name -- but it
> probably had copyright issues.
Please. Get it straight. Trademark, not copyright.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
According to Transmeta's site, the 'Code Morphing' software only interprets x86 instructions, so we're out of luck there.
However, it would be nice to have a boot-up menu like:
1) x86 - Windows XP
2) PPC - Mac OS X
3) UltraSPARC II - Solaris 9
Unfortunately, Transmeta's chips are mainly geared toward being low power consumption, I doubt making a processor that can do a decent job of emulating other processors is high on their list.
But what % of palm or Rio owners can name what kind of processor powers it? With a PC, the first spec listed is going to be the processor type. Consequently, that gets a lot of attention. With handhelds, most people care a lot more about battery life or form factor than processor type. Which is why I just can't see the day when people start writing in demanding Transmetta processors.
any chip named Efficeon is going to get beat up on the way to school for being a little fruity.
Pentium=Pent up energy
--Freeword Associations--
Athlon=Athletic
Opteron=Optimal
Celeron=Celerity... or maybe Celebrity
Efficeon=Efficient? That's a compliment like saying the fat girl has a good personality.
--Rob
what Transmeta is doing apres Linus
The use of french words are no longer allowed in courriel^Wemail.
The Right Reverend K. Reid Wightman,
According to a this article , "Efficeon" was chosen because the former name violated the trademarks of an animation company, Hanna-Barbara. Strange, because these are unrelated products.
Efficeon? This is why the marketing department is always the first to go when the IT guy snaps, and starts stalking the cubicles with an AK-47...
Transmeta Effaceon...The chip that hates itself.
Powering an android near you soon.
From the article:
So will I be able to turn it all the way up to "Max 300"?
Will I retire or break 10K?
...because 'Astro' is, at the very least, a registered trademark for a series of Motorola digital radios and their corresponding voice/data network.
Bruce Lane, KC7GR,
Blue Feather Technologies
Efficeon sounds like an Autobot that transforms into a flourescent bulb.
"Derp de derp."
Strange, because these are unrelated products.
Under U.S. law, A product name can still conflict with a completely unrelated product's trademarked name if the other trademark is a "famous trademark" as defined in the Trademark Dilution Act.
Besides, another user pointed out that Motorola, a semiconductor company, sells a product called "Astro".
Will I retire or break 10K?
You should have gotten points for funny rather than interesting, as after reading into it you can tell it's a joke.... they have fuck, and screw in the dictionary.. NO!! hahahah.
Celeron=Celerity... or maybe Celebrity
More like Apium graveolens .
Efficeon=Efficient?
As another user pointed out, Efficeon sounds more like a fish. Transmeta should have plundered classic literature again (like it did with Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe), possibly taking the name "Nemo" from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. Or maybe not.
That's a compliment like saying the fat girl has a good personality.
You didn't like Shallow Hal either, I take it?
Will I retire or break 10K?
What the hell is wrong with these moderators? Flamebait? It should be modded INSIGHTFUL and INFORMATIVE.
Cue intel-sounding theme, but with bagpipes.
No. Bag sucks.
(Inside joke. If you haven't played Dance Dance Revolution Extreme you won't get it.)
Will I retire or break 10K?
or "Bullisheon"
or "Squisheon" (my favorite)
Or how about "Bullshiteon"
Namaste
- SingleAtom technology squeezes the entire processor into a single atom which contains over a million protons with modified quark structure. The instability caused by the enormous number of protons causes the processor to decompose with a half-life of under
.000000000000000000000001 microseconds. The processor takes full advantage of this characteristic of heavy atoms and uses an antigravity-like technology to push the protons into the proper configuration. The processor executes its instructions through constant realignment of its protons.
- The processing pipeline has been broken down into 299,792,458 discreet steps, enabling Intel to remove the internal clock altogether and run the processor at the speed of light. One "cycle" represents the absolute cosmic measure unit of time, and all operations occur in one cycle.
- 24,856 new instructions have been added since the previous model, bringing the new total to over 72 trillion instructions. All SCO intellectual property can be programmed in one instruction, increasing SCO revenues due to legal action.
- RAM has been depreciated. 4 exabytes of internal general-use registers allow software to make more efficient data access, providing a more compelling Internet experience.
- Intel (r) AnswerNow (tm) Technology bends the space-time continuum, allowing the results of branch instructions and mathematical operations to be used before they are computed. The computations take place during idle cycles at some future time.
- Intel (r) CodeSpirit (tm) Technology processes machine code by its spirit, rather than its letter, completely eliminating software bugs and preventing malicious code, such as a virus, from executing.
- Intel (r) AlienCode (tm) Technology, based on CodeSpirit, allows users to execute programs written for any other processor, without previous knowledge of that processor's instruction set. The technology examines and "decyphers" the instructions and data in much the same way that scientists decypher written languages used by past civilizations. Via AnswerNow and CodeSpirit technologies, programs written for other processors actually run faster and better on Intel platforms than on their native processor. As a side effect, the processor now directly executes programs and scripts written in Java or any P-code or text-based language. In fact, even instructions spelled out in English are understood and executed by the processor.
- Intel (r) BrainWaves (tm) Technology allows the processor to read and write information in the user's mind. The processor is given away for free, and based on the user's thoughts, targetted advertisements are inserted directly into the user's mind. The process is painless, and simply feels like a song stuck in your head. A nominal (i.e., expensive) fee can be paid daily to eliminate the advertisements.
- Intel (r) NoPower (tm) Technology allows the processor to run by harnessing the energy present in the universe on a quantum scale. No electric current is required to operate the processor and since it consumes the energy present in the physical matter from which it is made, the processor absorbs all heat it might otherwise generate, operating as a perpetual energy source. This also causes the processor to run at 0 Kelvin, making it the coolest running processor ever released.
Buy one today!TIA.
Share and Enjoy!
since no one will buy them? ;)
(sorry, couldn't resist.)
Do be honest, the only reason that I cared about this company was because Linus was involved with it. Without him, I simply don't see why this company is anything to get excited about.
Actually, thats copied exactly from here.
>This eWeek story gives the lowdown on what Transmeta is >doing apres Linus.
;)
We all know by know that Linus apres Transmeta is still doing the same
Exercise caution when modding this message up: the author acts like a jerk when his karma is excellent.
Hopefully this iteration will be more readily available than the previous chips.
The transmeta chips have some great power/heat characteristics, and the ability to speed up / slow down based on load. These would be great for a small home linux server / gateway type device.. If there was someone making/selling this type of small/quiet/cool device.
I was all set to use this CPU in my new boy robot too! I was just figuring out how to make the rocket boots.... (Sh*t, I just dated myself)
- I stole your sig.
"From the article:
Transmeta is the "number two" vendor in the ultraportable mainstream notebook market "
So what? Being number two certainly doesn't mean much in such a niche market. TMTA's revenues last quarter was $5M. That's not even a rounding error in Chipzilla's books.
I understood that Transmeta's goal was high performance. The plan was to beat Intel on both power consumption and performance. When they realized that it wasn't to be they concetrated on the power saving aspects. But way back when the market for these was going to be performance workstations and servers.
Lasers Controlled Games!
Does the name sound like a wussy transformer to anyone else? I picture it being a Kia and as annoying as Bubble Bee
Slashdot comments can be accurate, highly modded, or posted quickly. Pick two.
They should have kept the "Astro" moniker and licensed the cartoon for the marketing.
Oh, and fired thier lawyers. Trademark is difficult to enforce if the products are not in the same market or are marketed for unrelated usage.
Read, L
I went to battle MC Escher, but drew a blank
No. The Pentium M is Intel going for performance and low power full blast instead of doing the Pentium 4 "we just want to ramp up the MHZ for marketing, and we'll leave parts of the chip performing at such slower speeds that the only way to get anything out of those extra cycles is to treat it like a multiprocessor system and stuff another thread down it!" thing. The Pentium M was heralded by people doing processor reviews, but Intel's marketing people were so scared that a higher-performance Intel chip might have a much lower MHZ rating and thus confuse Joe Consumer (gee, pentium M 1.4 vs Pentium 4 M 1.5? Joe Consumer will choose Pentium 4M even though it performs much worse and takes 3 times the power, since he doesn't know anything about instructions per clock) that they don't want anybody to advertise "Pentium M x.y mhz", they want it labeled "Centrino Wireless Solution" (how's that for marketspeak?). If Intel were producing a desktop version of the Pentium M, I'd take it over a P4 any day.
Celeron is probably taken from the Latin adjective celer, celeris, meaning quick (remember the Olympic motto- citius, altius, fortius- faster, higher, stronger? citius is the comparative form of celer, just as better is the comparative form of good). Hardly a good moniker for the reduced performance chip line :)
I wonder how efficeont (sic) it is...
a new Eff'n chip.
score:-2, marketing.
...on what Transmeta is doing apres Linus.
I believe Linus is still retained by Transmeta, he's just being given a free arm as to what he wants to do: i.e. hack the kernel.
Martin Brooks / Slayer99 #linux / UIN 2178117
As my former boss at Bell Labs said when they announced the name "Lucent" for the split-off company and unveiled the red ring logo, "I bet they paid some consultant a _bunch_ of money to come up with that one." Maybe not as bad a name as the Trash-80, but it's certainly no prize.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
walla
voila
For some reason, when people get this one wrong, it really annoys me...
Todd
-- !todd erases a red dot! I steal music on the internet.
Since Linus no longer works there and the company really has no ties to Linux or open source anymore, why is this on Slashdot? This is news for Nerds, Stuff that matters, not Tom's Hardware Guide.
"Oh, "Astro" was such a friendly name -- but it probably had trademark issues....
(jetsons mode on)
Rade-rark rissues....rut roh rastro...
(jm off)
Damn, your right.
Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
I have used quite a few sub-notebooks(Sony, Toshiba, Fuhitsu) with Crusoe chips(they are found only on sub-notebooks) and not one of the notebooks even get battery life of slightly more than 2 hours. I would really like to know what model of laptop you are talking about.
It'd be nice if the new chip is at least a bit faster than the Via stuff - the 800 MHz mini-itx boxes don't need fans, but are supposed to be really marginal at crunching DVDs, while the 1 GHz version of the mini-itx have fans in them. Small ones, but not quite silent. (I'm of course typing this on a laptop that's mostly quiet when it isn't overheated, and sitting next to a 233 MHz box P2 that's pretty loud when I don't have the skins off for repairs, and even louder tonight :-)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I already modded my posting down :-)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks