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Positive Reports From Transmeta

utopicillusion writes "The register reports : "More cash flowed into Transmeta in the second quarter than it spent, the company said late last week as a teaser for its upcoming results announcement." This is about after a month that CNN predicted that Transmeta was going under. "

5 of 77 comments (clear)

  1. I find this suprising by X-Phile · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not familiar with any new hardware that has Transmeta chips in them, and I don't remember hearing any big news about new partnerships. Where is the cash coming from? They promised a lot a long time ago, and they kind of stalled.

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    "Well you're not Fiona Apple, and if you're not Fionna Apple, I don't give a rat's ass."
    1. Re:I find this suprising by morcheeba · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Orion Multisystem (96 processors under your desk) and the OQO are recent examples. They are in some Sharp notebooks ... browse the list here.

  2. CNN story sponserd by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Perhaps that CNN story was sponsored by a competitor of transmeta .
    Or perhaps someone who was looking to scoop up the ashes .
    Rumouring the demise of a company that may be suffering , but not out for the count can tip the scales .
    Especially if the story comes from a source like CNN.
    Its good to know this did not happen as i was looking forward to a few of the advances Transmeta were developing

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    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
  3. IBM's new chips = Transmeta revival? by bbzzdd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The chips going into the Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 are similar in technology to what Transmeta was doing years back. They all strip out out of order execution, branch prediction, etc to reduce die size and circuit complexities. Maybe people are starting to realize the way around the Ghz wall is to reduce complexity?

  4. Re:Question by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    For those of us who don't care about Linus, Transmeta were still interesting. They developed a commercially-viable VLIW CPU, something Intel are still failing to do with Itanium. Some of us believe that VLIW is a particularly interesting concept in CPU design, in much the same way RISC is. Having the microcode in software, while not a new idea (the MicroVAX did it, for example) is also interesting.

    Sadly, for all their interesting technology, they are still not producing CPUs that are all that useful - although the 96-CPU desktop using Transmeta chips does look fun...

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