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Transmeta Sues Intel for Patent Infringement

Cr0w T. Trollbot writes "Today Transmeta filed suit against Intel for patent infringement. From the article: 'The suit [...] alleges that Intel infringed upon ten of Transmeta's patents. The patents cover computer architecture and power efficiency technologies.' Transmeta offered a low-power x86 processor until last year which used Transmeta's vaunted 'code morphing' software."

8 of 161 comments (clear)

  1. Sigh... by pete6677 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is anyone else getting a little sick of these patent infringment stories? Its now common knowledge that you can't build anything in the United States without some IP leech suing you, so is this really even a big deal anymore? We all know the eventual result of this: either more products will be invented in other countries or the only things that will be made in the U.S. anymore will be by companies that have a large legal budget, which I'm sure Intel does. Stories like this will become small insignificant news.

  2. I used to think they were cool... by posterlogo · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ...but now, they just seem like patent trolls.


    FTA: "The complaint charges that Intel has infringed and is infringing Transmeta's patents by making and selling a variety of microprocessor products, including at least Intel's Pentium III, Pentium 4, Pentium M, Core and Core 2 product lines."

    They sure are going back a long ways...

    FTA: "Last year, Transmeta laid off 67 employees in a restructuring plan aimed to focus more heavily on IP and the phase out its less profitable processors."

    So they went out of the business of actually making anything (presumably because their products were not competitive in the market place), so NOW they turn to their IP to make any money. I really don't know if they've got a valid case or not, but they certainly seem to be trolling.

    1. Re:I used to think they were cool... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Focussing on IP is not necessarily a bad thing for a semiconductor company. ARM did it in the '90s. Building fabs is expensive. There is a huge market for cores that can be modified slightly and then fab'd as ASICs. A lot of mobile 'phones have an ARM9 core, for example. This is a design licensed from ARM, modified by someone else (e.g. TI, who add DSPs and some other things to the die) and then fab'd. It's cheaper to buy a general-purpose core from ARM than to design your own, especially since you can then guarantee it is ARM-compatible (and hence has compilers available for it).

      I don't know how long this business model will survive things like OpenCores - it's even cheaper to download the HDL for a chip for free than buy it - but they may well be successful for a while.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  3. I wonder ... by guysmilee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a developer when i see a company do this ... I seriously quetion if I can refuse to participate in my companies work in pursuing patents for my work ... b/c if the company was to ever collapse (not being a business person) I could be crippling my own future at other employers ... imagine switching jobs and being your new company being sued by a "defunct" company you used to work for ...

  4. Re:Go figure - too clever by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's too clever a saying for me to have been the first to have thought of it, so I probably just heard it before.

    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.

  5. Intel = Deep Pockets by StateOfTheUnion · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Guess Transmeta is going after the biggest guy with the deepest pockets . . . seems a little hard to believe that AMD wouldn't be doing something similar to what Intel is doing (that Transmeta claims in infringing).

    If Transmeta scores a win against Intel, then maybe that could lead to licensing agreements with others that may be afraid that they would also lose in litigation. In the meantime, this is one time where AMD may be thankful that they don't have the largest marketshare and the deepest pockets in the CPU industry.

  6. Re:now just another sleezy IP company eh by MikeBabcock · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Then surely you don't remember very well. Before AMD and now Intel started pushing low-power CPUs, Transmeta was there with the concept. Transmeta was at the forefront of Intel-compatible low-power CPUs with dynamic power profiles dependant on usage.

    It was well vaunted at their launch that a laptop running a DVD wouldn't last as long on battery as if it were doing word processing.

    The fact they didn't catch on isn't relevant to what they contributed to the industry itself.

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  7. Re:Go figure - too clever by acvh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nope.

    Woody Allen.

    Those who can, do.
    Those who can't, teach.
    Those who can't teach, teach gym.