Transmeta to unveil mystery chip
Silicon Valley's most secretive technology company will lift the veil Wednesday on a mysterious new processor named Crusoe.
The subject of profound speculation during the past several months, Crusoe has been kept tightly under wraps at Transmeta, a company funded by Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen. Another claim to fame for the company: It provides a day job for Linux creator Linus Torvalds.
The company's only public statement about the product, embedded in the HTML code of the its Web site at www.transmeta.com , announces that "Crusoe will be cool hardware and software for mobile applications."
The full story is online at www.zdnn.com .
Compaq cuts PC prices
- Intel, DRAM makers: Let's get together
- WWF body slams cybersquatter
- Canadian buys microsoft.com for $50
- Electronics prices expected to rise
- Hollywood sues alleged DVD pirates
- Nuclear powers end Y2K monitoring
- Captivate elevates the Internet
- Windows 2000 systems to ship early
- Intel Solano: Back to the drawing board
Rambus sues Hitachi
- HP adopts Athlon
- Be free? BeOS maker says yes
- Battery could give laptops 20-hour life
- WD exits high-end drive business
- Intel slaps Via with international suit
- Transmeta unwraps `code-morphing' chip
- DRAM alliance targets PC memory
- Hollywood craves cancellation of iCraveTV
- S3, Transmeta to develop Linux Net devices
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




