- Thu Jan 29 2009 Venture firm picks up Transmeta chip patents
Intellectual Ventures has acquired the patent portfolio of Transmeta, formerly a supplier of Intel-compatible x86 processors.
Posted by Brooke Crothers
- Fri Nov 13 1998 Top secret chip less secret now
Transmeta, the highly secretive, well-funded Silicon Valley chip start-up may be offering the first glimpses of its well-guarded microprocessor design.
Posted by Stephen Shankland and Brooke Crothers
- Thu Sep 30 1999 Secretive start-up Transmeta takes aim at Intel
The top-secret Silicon Valley start-up apparently
hopes to offer Intel-compatible chips while sidestepping legal landmines, a
new patent reveals.
Posted by Stephen Shankland
- Wed Sep 10 2003 TI to pay Intergraph $18 million
The company says Texas Instruments will pay a one-time $18 million licensing fee as part of a settlement ending all patent litigation between the two.
Posted by Evan Hansen
- Mon Mar 3 2003 How to milk an Apple; Flashback to 1984; 802.11g the "Ferrari" of home networking; more
How to milk an Apple; Flashback to 1984; 802.11g the "Ferrari" of home networking; more
Posted by CNET staff
- Wed Jan 3 2001 Transmeta to help AMD push into servers
Advanced Micro Devices plans to take on Intel in the server market, enlisting one of its own competitors to help out.
Posted by Michael Kanellos and Mary Jo Foley
- Mon Mar 10 1997 Intel could hit 1 GHz with Merced
Intel is working on a chip that could debut at speeds as high as 600 MHz and soon after rev up to 1 GHz.
Posted by Brooke Crothers
- Sun Feb 11 2007 Intel shows off 80-core processor
The chip unveiled at IDF works, but there are a lot of hurdles to overcome before an 80-core chip shows up in a living room.
Posted by Tom Krazit
- Mon Jun 25 2001 Compaq narrows server-chip competition
The company's move to transfer its Alpha chip expertise to Intel leaves just three major chip designs in competition: Intel's Itanium, Sun's UltraSparc and IBM's Power.
Posted by Stephen Shankland and Joe Wilcox
- Thu Jul 19 2001 Itanium: Sun Microsystems' worst nightmare?
Ashok Kumar looks past the hype to gauge Intel's new uberchip and why it may keep Scott McNealy awake at night.
Posted by Ashok Kumar