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From... Crusoe cruises ahead
by Alexandra Krasne
(IDG) -- A flat two-pound Web pad designed to wirelessly connect to the Internet, a crash-proof computer, and a notebook you can run all day on batteries are just some of the myriad devices that Transmeta's Crusoe chips will bring to market soon. The devices are closer (and cooler) than you think. They run one of two types of Crusoe chips -- the TM3120 for mobile devices running up to 400 MHz and the TM5400 for laptops running up to 700 MHz.
Web pads may become available as soon as April, but more likely in June, says Frank Priscaro, Transmeta's director of brand development. He gave the preview to an enthralled crowd at the LinuxWorld Expo last week. S3 is the only vendor publicly signed up to manufacture Web pads running the Crusoe chips.
Transmeta is working with vendors to get the 5400 chips on notebooks now, and the first releases will coincide with the Web pad release, Priscaro says.
He also describes a crash-proof computer. With the help of the Crusoe chips, you'll reboot and run your computer backward to the spot before it crashed. From there, you'll retrieve your data. Unfortunately, the first round of chips won't support that function. On the insideTransmeta's Crusoe chips can run faster because they use software to imitate an x86 processor. Transmeta's programs save blocks of x86 instructions in a cache, like caching a Web page, for greater speed in retrieval. Crusoes contain one-quarter the logic transistors Pentiums currently have. Because logic transistors generate electricity and heat, Crusoes will stay cooler and use less power. A 700-MHz Transmeta chip uses 1 watt of power to a Pentium III's 12-15 watts. "I don't know if Intel is quivering," Priscaro says. "It's an awfully big company. But it doesn't have anything like [Crusoe]." Devices running cooler and on less power are just two of the possibilities that Transmeta Crusoe chips (to be manufactured by IBM) will deliver.
RELATED STORIES: Analysis: Crusoe is a CPU for the roadRELATED IDG.net STORIES: Too early to assess Crusoe's impact, analysts say RELATED SITES: Transmeta Corp.
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