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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ptanner who wrote (127096)10/31/2000 10:04:35 PM
From: Alighieri  Respond to of 1583493
 
IBM puts Transmeta plans on hold
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 31, 2000, 4:50 p.m. PT

update IBM has suspended a project geared toward releasing a ThinkPad notebook containing Crusoe
processors from Transmeta, company executives confirmed Tuesday.

The reversal couldn't come at a worse time for Transmeta, as the company is slated to hold its initial public
offering on Nov. 6, according to the Web site of principal underwriter Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.

IBM has canceled a project for adding Crusoe microprocessors to its ThinkPad 240
notebook, saying that the notebook does not fit within its current marketing plans,
according to a company spokesman. In June, Big Blue had showcased a ThinkPad
240 containing a Crusoe chip at PC Expo.

The company will continue to examine Transmeta technology, but there are no plans
for Crusoe-powered notebooks in the near future, the spokesman said.

"The 240 project has been put on hold," the spokesman said. "But we continue to look
at Transmeta on an ongoing basis."

IBM had not officially committed to releasing a Crusoe notebook commercially, yet
Transmeta and IBM executives in June acknowledged that Big Blue was gunning to
release a Crusoe-based ThinkPad in the fourth quarter of this year--if plans remained
on track.

IBM had earlier enlisted Quanta, a Taiwanese notebook manufacturer, to manufacture
the ThinkPad 240.

Transmeta specializes in notebook
processors that consume less power than
chips from Intel or Advanced Micro Devices. Transmeta notebooks
promise to weigh less and consume less power than other notebooks on
the market.

While Sony and other Japanese manufacturers have announced plans to
release Transmeta notebooks, IBM's support was seen as a major
victory. IBM is one of the largest notebook manufacturers in the world.

IBM's semiconductor division is also manufacturing the Crusoe chip on
behalf of Transmeta.

While IBM officials did not precisely clarify why the project was cancelled,
analysts speculated that the relative performance of Crusoe chips could be a factor.

Crusoe processors do not directly run Windows programs from Microsoft. Instead, programs are filtered through
an additional "code-morphing" software layer, which can diminish performance. Transmeta executives have said
that because of code morphing, a 700-MHz Crusoe processor performs more like a 600-MHz Pentium chip.

Early benchmark tests, however, indicate that a wider performance discrepancy may exist.

If Transmeta can't offer an equivalent performance to competitors' chips, "Intel starts to come back with a good
story," said Linley Gwennap, an analyst with the Linley Group.