Transmeta Unveiled in November? 111
terrified writes "This little blurb on Yahoo news this morning says that Linus is hinting at an announcement from Transmeta at the November Comdex in Las Vegas. " We need to set up some pools: When the secret will be revealed, and maybe some sort of pools for what the secret is. Transmeta employees who leak data to me will be given a cut if I win ;)
Contest for most interesting theory (Score:1)
Re:Some speculation about Transmeta's activities (Score:1)
Closed source Linus (Score:2)
He got famous by starting a completely open project, in a very humble fashion, inviting anyone who felt like it to help turn it into something really useful. Everything in the spirit of cooperation and selflessly making things better for users everywhere. I think we can say he succeeded far beyond what he set out to do and that his work has affected the industry on the whole to no small degree.
Now he's an anchor of one of the most secretive companies in this industry. He can't even say anything about what he's working on or what the company is going to do. We only know the company grabs patents to the left and to the right and we anticipate that it's going to make a big splash someday.
Whether or not that is true remains to be seen, but hiring him was a good move by Transmeta. Legends are the only thing the company has, so far.
Transmeta IPO (Score:1)
Re:HTML Hype? (Score:1)
!-- There are no tyops in this web page. --
Coincidence? (Score:1)
Thoughts?
Even more off topic (Score:1)
>> > smell bill
>> BILL GATES smell of POO!!!
>> > shoot bill
But would actually go like:
> shoot bill
With what?
> with gun
Huh?
> shoot bill with gun
Which gun: the pearl handled six shooter gun or the glossy black uzi gun?
> the uzi
Huh?
> sht bill with glossy black uzi gun
I don't understand sht
> shot bill with glossy black uzi gun
The glossy black uzi gun is not loaded
and so on...
:)
-Dana (I miss Infocom!)
Transmeta's Web Page (Score:1)
There are no tyops in this web page."
-a message in the source of Transmeta's site
Microsoft Slackware (Score:1)
Of course, if we're talking anatomy, they both mean pretty much the same thing.
Re:One good idea (Score:1)
Transmeta = Star Wars episode 1. (Score:2)
My bet is on... (Score:1)
I am not sure what benefits would come out of a new CPU design, however. Even if it can run different types of binaries, who cares? It is best to have a standard anyway, and if there is a standard, then the app you need is most likely going to be available for it. Maybe they just have some sort of breakthrough in CPU speed in the works, and everything else on the platform to go along with it...
EC
Re:The benifits to Transmeta.. (Score:1)
Re:Linux 2.4 Kernel (Score:1)
~luge
Re:My guess (Score:1)
I'm for real, I'm an architecture junkie and sometimes chip monkey
for them.
He asked for entries in the pool for "what they will announce".
My ideas are based on public stuff I've seen on the net, where the bleeding-edge-state-of-the-art is and what I know about the problems they may be trying to solve. I have no special knowledge from behind the transmeta non-reality zone
naw... (Score:1)
I doubt Linus would work for a company that is planning to pull a fast one on investors...if he was looking to make a quick buck, he could have done so with Linux.
Conspiracy theory - Transmeta is a disguise (Score:2)
"Torvalds and other people known to be involved with Transmeta, including Microsoft's co-founder Paul Allen and Chief Executive David Ditzel, have been careful not to reveal what the company is up to."
And:
"The combination of money from Microsoft's co-founder and know-how from Torvalds [...]"
(From Roland Moller, Helsinki newsroom +358-9-680 50 242, fax +358-9-680 2284, news@reuters.fi)
Let me see if I can get this straight: Linus went to work in a company that is also funded by Microsoft people, that until today did nothing but let Linus compile kernel code every day so that he can churn out an operating system that is "a serious threat to Microsoft", the very same company whose employees are funding him...
I think that Transmeta was set up by Paul Allen so that Linus could work on his Linux to artificially create competition to Microsoft, just so that they can claim they do have serious competition... (I doubt Paul Allen gave his money just to bet on both horses in this race.) Clever, if you ask me.
Isn't it interesting that until Linus joined Transmeta, hardly anybody heard about Linux, and a year after he did that, we see Linux on practically every computer store's shelves?...
Just food for thought.
Re:It's a mind reading implant chip for the NSA! (Score:2)
Some crazy woman wanted to ask Linus something: She started talking about how information technology could be used for monitoring people and stealing their freedom. THEN she started claiming that in the '50's 3 million people had been implanted with a MICROCHIP (a microchip in the 50's!) and that just last week she spoke with a colonel who had refused a microchip. Then she furiously went on saying that soon all babies will be implanted and in the future it will be possible to remotely read anyone's thoughts with such a chip. At this point the audience was laughing their asses off. To this Linus simply replied, "well that was kind of an UFO talk, but.. I can' really reveal what Transmeta is doing (laughter from audience), but anyways, I think information technology will actually help people gain more freedom'
Later on someone was talking about how technology can help us to talk to old or sick people who can no longer talk, to which Linus replied 'talking to the dead, you mean?'. Then one of the panelists said 'Now I REALLY want to know what Transmeta is doing'
Translation (Score:3)
This is done in a bit of haste, sorry...
No new revelations of the mysterious Transmeta
Creator of the Linux Operating System, Linus Torvalds's employes creates some questions: Nobody knows what it does. Torvalds made one revelation to Tietoviikko today: He revealed when he will reveal what Transmeat does. The schedule for the announcement will be told in the Comdex trade show in mid-November.
No further information on Torvald's mysterious employes has spread to public. Transmeta has been suspected for example to be working on a highly efficient microprocessor. Or some other groundbreaking program. Transmeta's homepage at www.transmeta.com [transmeta.com] doesn't offer too many hints - not even in the source code for the page, which points out that there are no revelations on Transmeta there.
"My strongest guess is that Transmeta doesn't do anything", said Risto Siilasmaa, the CEO of information security company Data Fellows in the Information Society seminar held in Helsinki University on Wednesday. One possibility is that Transmeta's employees just hang around in their work place, and then sell the hyped-up company onwards for a good price.
Philosopher Pekka Himanen, who also spoke at the Information Society seminary told that he has visited the front of Transmeta's office. The office building has darkened glasses and doesn't let visitors in.
Linus Torvalds placed his words carefully in Thurday on Transmeta announcements. "I can only say now that we will announce the schedule for the announcement at Comdex, but this can also be subject to changes", Torvalds said cryptically.
(Translated from http://www.tietoviikko.c om/cgi-bin/lueuutinen.cgi?id=45382 [tietoviikko.com])
--
Socioeconomic study (Score:3)
Their findings, scheduled to be released in November, reveal much about human interaction as it relates to the above factors, and is entitled, "Gullibility: We Can't Believe You Retards Fell For It!"
Chips that can change on the fly. (Score:1)
They might have come up with a chip (or chips) that can actually run multiple different microcode sets at the same time. The benefit here would be that the consumer wouldn't have to switch between different microcode and reboot machines everytime they wanted to use something else. They'd be able to run multiple OSs at the same time, ala VMWARE.
My guess (Score:1)
Digital already did this one (Score:1)
I read this a long time ago, and I cant remember where, so it MUST be true
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:1)
No, I would run it under the native instruction set. Transmeta has several compiler writers and of course linux to make a direct port very speedy.
"This could also make the idea of vmware obsolete, imagine being able to save/restore the machine state to special areas of disk/memory. You could cycle through operating systems rather than terminals using alt + F key."
With many operating systems you can do this already. Hardware and memory access are the only real problems.
HTML Hype? (Score:1)
[!-- There are no secret messages in the source code to this web page. --]
floating logos (Score:1)
Back in my college days sometimes everybody would just throw all the laundry in a big heap in the corner of the room. If you threw a blanket over the cloads it was kind of like a big beanbag chair (which was like free furniture). But, if you just dove in to the uncovered cloads heap, you'd end up half buried, floating in the cloads.
Re:Transmeta IPO (Score:1)
Wouldn't it be hilarious if they went public before their product was disclosed?
latin 101 (Score:2)
meta -/me't*/ or
both definitions from dictionary.com
btw the name transmeta was almost supplanted by Interpseudo, Megareference, and PrestoChango!!!
Re:Even more off topic (Score:1)
http://www.xyzzynews.com
There's probably a more comprehensive starting point, but this is the first URL that popped into my head. Check out the "community" link especially.
(Just two weeks till the '99 I-F competition! http://www.textfire.com)
Three levels of indirection (Score:1)
>
>``The company has considered saying something at Comdex, or at least saying when we will announce something.''
So a better first sentence would have been, "I think I can now tell you when I will be able to tell you when I will be able to tell you."
Joe
boobie prize! (Score:1)
Re:Contest for most interesting theory (Score:1)
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:2)
The Burroughs B1700 (as I recall) was one such user-microprogrammable CPU, with standard microprograms to optimize the architecture for running ALGOL programs, or for COBOL programs, and so on. I seem to recall from the same era a nanoprogrammable machine -- the nanocode was horizontal (very wide instruction word) and that reprogrammed the architecture on which the (vertical) microprograms ran (which reprogrammed
Doing all this on a microprocessor would be pretty neat (I'm trying to remember if Intel's iAPX 432 Ada chip had some of this capability). Being able to do it on the fly (at a context switch, say) from a micro- or nano-program cache would be doubly so.
Whether applications (or even the kernel) could be compiled down to the microinstruction level would very much depend on the specific memory architecture - microprogram words might be a totally different size from the main memory and transferring data/code between the two different memories could be too much of a bottleneck to run the application that way. But it probably wouldn't be necessary: a really smart compiler will optimize the top level instruction set for the program and generate the appropriate microcode for that instruction set. (Some work was done on this on the micro/nano programmable machines of back in the late 70's - I haven't followed it since then.)
Of course, for any such chip, being able to run native x86/PPC/you-name-it binaries would fall out as a natural given appropriate swappable microcode. Given techniques developed for Java machines like JIT, those binaries could even be recompiled on-the-fly into better microcode for improved performance over what the orginal chip would give. The trick comes in managing all this, which is where someone with operating system expertise comes in.
The Truth (Score:1)
Well, it all started with the cyber dog...you've heard of them, right?
Well, why stop there...so, now Transmeta is one-upping it, and doing something previously unheard of...the cyber Penguin. Yes, it swims, it tries to fly (but fails), and it'll bite your hand off for a bit of herring...
And the best feature of all, it has a special sound chip, which listens for incorrect pronounciations of Linux and will bite your butt (literally) and correct you.
Something worth getting excited for? YOU BET!
[this ad paid for by Clueless inc.]
my guess (Score:1)
and version 0.1 of NNIX to go with.
How exciting!
Re:Chips that can change on the fly. (Score:1)
Given a fairly vanilla RISC core and a lot of on-chip writeable memory for the microcode, you're there. Optimizing it, parallelizing it, and coming up with quick ways of swapping microcode (to a different architecture) make it better. Really fast ways of swapping microcode (say on a context switch) and something like just-in-time compiling of new microcode to optimize an application's code make it better yet, and all this is within the realm of current state of the art.
You'd need a smart OS to manage it -- partly like VMware and partly like the way the Linux loader can invoke a JVM to run a Java class file (or the app of your choice to run the program types of your choice if you configure it).
If this isn't what Transmeta is doing, somebody else ought to. It's just too cool.
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:1)
No, not quite! Besides "emulating" the processor, you need a "monitor" to emulate all the other hardware that an OS would expect.
Roger.
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:1)
No matter what it looks like, there isn't a
Transupter characteristics (Score:1)
Imagine you have a board of these low cost CPU's with great message passing capabilities. Things like graphics accelerators could become obsolete. Instead you configure the current CPU to be extremely good at vector transformations, or bump mapping... For better performance you just add a couple of extra processors. It would allow all sorts of other hardware devices to be implemented on a single CPU in a large system - allocating as many processors as necessary - and optimising each one.
No matter what it looks like, there isn't a
The Truth (Score:1)
Though it would be nice to actually know what they are actually doing.
No News Pool (Score:1)
It's so secretive, it's gotta be good. (Score:1)
Going by uber logic, Transmeta's incredible secrecy plus Linus gives me only one uber logical conclusion.
The technology is going to change the world as we know it. (passe, cliche? sigh. only so many ways to say it. )
Don't be surprised if it isn't as INCREDIBLE.. (Score:2)
Re:The Truth (Score:2)
It's funny though. In the age of corporate memos leaking to the media, hype for everything from tacos to movies, Transmeta's (unintentionally?) pulled the greatest publicity stunt of all time: silence.
Re:Don't be surprised if it isn't as INCREDIBLE.. (Score:1)
Attitude shift completed (Score:1)
Coolest company? (Score:1)
'Course, we're not gonna find out in November, either. As Linus said, "The company has considered saying something at Comdex, or at least saying when we will announce something." (italics added - duh!)
That said, if there are any Transmeta employees out there, please torment Rob with the most vague, ambiguous comments to increase his pain!
The benifits to Transmeta.. (Score:2)
Transmeta slashbox (Score:1)
Btw, it is interesting to note that the site runs Apache/1.1.1. It's a while since that version was released. I wonder what kernel version it is running..
Transmeta releases flagship glowing_pickle product (Score:2)
"We wanted to corner the market on glowing pickles, and because of the kind of cutthroat competition in this field, Transmeta had to do everything it could to keep it's intellectual property safe," said CEO of Transmeta David Ditzel.
Reached for comment at his home, Transmeta employee Linus Torvalds had this to say:
"I didnt want to work on something that was directly related to Linux."
The pickle technology developed at Transmeta is clean and amenable to mass production. With the release of this product, Transmeta establishes itself as one of the leading high tech pickle vendors.
"From now on, when you say -glowing pickle-, the one thing that will come to mind is -transmeta-. They will corner the market with their extremely solid product," says market analyst Reddy Terwal.
The glowing pickle product, incidentally, will be named "This product is not named yet".
--
Seriously though folks, does _ANYONE_ know what the hell is going on in there? Do you think that just maybe, perchance, this great secrecy is a nice little PR move to get people excited?
Remember the simpsons episode where "gabbo" came to springfield? The only ads they ran for him either went "Gabbo is COMING!!" or "gabbo.. Gabbo.. GABBO!!", about 3 second soundbytes. Somehow, it smells the same way for this whole Transmeta thing.
-Laxative
Re:The benifits to Transmeta.. (Score:1)
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:1)
Here's my guess (Score:4)
My guess is they've been slaving away on the technology behind the next generation of gaming, a new breed of interactive fiction with incredible lifelike gameplay.
Though shadowy contacts with Transmeta's sinister agents I have managed to obtain this transcript, which should hopefully convey some the raw excitement on offer.
Transmeta Adventure
An Interactive Next-Generation Gaming Experience
by Linux Torwald and David Ditzy
You are in a cave there is BILL GATES here!!!
What do you want to do now TELL ME!
> smell bill
BILL GATES smell of POO!!!
> shoot bill
You shoot the BILL GATES with GUN! He disappears in a puff of smoke! Very good!
(Your score has gone up by two points.)
> release new software release beating windows
Yes! You have won!! and You get yoghurt!
(--end of transcript--)
Apparently the full version will also feature a section where you have to get the treasure and successfully negotiate a maze of twisty little stock options, all alike. Personally I can't wait.
(Look, none of us have a clue what's they're doing, so why not fill this article up with off-topic rubbish? Well that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it.)
--
Re:Transmeta slashbox (Score:1)
206.184.214.11:80 * Linux 1.3.xx, 2.0.0 to 2.0.34
doesn't give architecture, tho
Re:Transmeta releases flagship glowing_pickle prod (Score:2)
Call me cynical, but I got played for a sap then, and I don't really intend to this time around.
Transmeta may come out with something Really Cool - but until They say something official about it, it doesn't really affect me.
Re:Transmeta releases flagship glowing_pickle prod (Score:1)
Re:Linux 2.4 Kernel (Score:1)
--Ben
Vaporware? Not! (Score:2)
As I understand the term, "vaporware" is an announced but not (and possibly never to be) released product, publicized in order to "compete" with an existing product. The idea is to prevent buyers from purchasing the existing product while waiting (maybe forever) for the release of yours. To skip the usual anti-MS rhetoric, I consider Sony's PS2 and Nintendo's Dolphin projects to be vaporware competition to Sega's Dreamcast (even though I am holding out for PS2 myself).
If Transmeta is vaporware, what existing product are they competing with? They aren't pre-empting sales of any existing product, because no one knows exactly what product Transmeta is supposed to be better than. Vaporware, no. Not hype either, because they aren't promoting whatever they're doing themselves, a wierd sort of anti-hype. What we're seeing (and generating for that matter) is "Buzz", all coming from outside sources who want to know what's going on.
Wonder how much Comdex paid... (Score:2)
This is the best advertising stunt going - wish I had thought of it.
Re:Attitude shift completed (Score:2)
Transmeta revealed. (Score:1)
When asked what future projects they would be working on, a company spokseperson said "Our next initiative is named GorpoTron 3000, but I can't tell you what it does."
Hotnutz.com [hotnutz.com]
If theres a pool (Score:1)
Hmmmmm..... (Score:1)
Re:floating cloud - logos subliminal Disney thang? (Score:1)
They redesigned them for Windows 98, and whenever I see them, I expect to see, in the centre, not the Windows logo, but Donald Duck.
george
There IS no product in development at Transmeta... (Score:2)
You set up a company, keeping secret exactly what it is you are working on. You raise Venture Capital. You hype like mad [but see below...]. You raise more and more VC. You float the company in one way or another. You hype the price up an dup and up. You sell your stock. You announce "Oh shit. Our vapor product didn't work so we are abandoning it but we'll be back later". You then wait a little while, start up another company and continue the process - those who found the company make an absolute FORTUNE out of this. It's been done many times before, and it'll be done again.
The only thing unique about Transmeta's approach is that they themselves do not publically hype, they just reply on Linus' devoted followers to do that for them - seems to have paid off bigtime, folks.
No doubt this will be marked as flamebait or a troll...
It's a mind reading implant chip for the NSA! (Score:2)
in Helsinki a few days ago, and apparently
someone asked him about NSA's implant chip
that can be used to read peoples minds.
Linus replied: "Well, I really can't talk about the things Transmeta does"
from a transmeta employee's desk.... (Score:2)
Some speculation about Transmeta's activities (Score:2)
Risto Siilasmaa (CEO of DataFellows [datafellows.com]) commented the issue at the Information Society-seminar [helsinki.fi] (which Linus Torvalds attended) in Helsinki on Wednesday: "My strongest guess is that Transmeta doesn't actually do anything."
There is some speculation that Transmeta's employees just hang around at their office and sell the company for a good price after this fuzz. Finnish philosopher Pekka Himanen mentioned that he has actually been in front of Transmeta's office and stated that the office has darkened windows and no visitors are allowed there.
Linux 2.4 Kernel (Score:1)
1) It's just a coincidence
2) Transmeta's product will improve/enhance Linux significantly
3) 2.4 Kernel will improve/enhance Transmeta's product significantly
By the way, I'm impressed with the "This web page is not here yet!" simplicity of their web-page. As someone pointed out earlier, it is reminiscent of Magritte. I've also thought that Microsoft's logo floating in the cloads was reminiscent of Magritte; perhaps someone with artistic talent could paint the picture: All white background, Microsoft logo with the caption: "Ceci n'est pas un monopole". (similar to the original at this link [magritte.com].)
Re:The Truth (Score:2)
I think that's exactly what the original poster meant. Transmeta is an upstart company with some new idea in working.. perhaps a good idea. An announcement for their new project would hit the news with as much chance as any other technical announcement of being hot and discussed by many. Instead, they have Linus answering "I can't tell you it's a secret" to every interviewer asking him what he does for a living.. result: everybody knows transmeta before they even come out with a product in their hands. And what's more.. everybody is curious to see what Linus is been up to all this time. What better publicity could they possibly get?
Nick Moraitakis
Re:The Truth (Score:1)
No matter what it looks like, there isn't a
Entertaining enough, but does not survive scrutiny (Score:2)
This would doubtless do a good job of popping the ``Internet Bubble,'' and could result in an overall market bloodbatch as people re-examined the non-existent value of other enterprises that have seen bloated valuations due to peoples' miscomprehension of the use of "e-Business."
It would, however, be rather less fun for the principal participants, as it would be a downright fraud to issue an IPO to a thus-worthless company and then walk away with a bundle of dollars.
The above interpretation of matters also would not survive the scrutiny required by an IPO. See RHAT 424B1 Filing [sec.gov] and S1. [sec.gov]
I'm still biased towards the material I wrote way back when on Transmeta; [hex.net] it seems nearer accurate than anything publicized before or since...
guess: multiple personality processor (Score:2)
Reminds me.... (Score:1)
I woulnd't be surprised if Transmeta makes toilet paper or something like that...Anything with this much hype is bound to suck.
I was there too (Score:2)
I think the seminar was great. It was great to see Linus and the CEO of Datafellows [datafellows.com] throw some opinions on oss vs. proprietary and a few other things. Linus was just repeating his view that over time the basic software will have enough features so that comsumers won't be willing to pay for new versions anymore. Then the competition will catch up and bring down prices evetually to the reproduction level which in the case of software available on the net is about zero. He also said that software companies can continue generating revenue by selling support services, tailoring business and creating new/better software for new needs. So nothing new there but a lot of media was there so good for them. Linus was also repeating his "Linus' law" which in my view is just the Maslow's hierarchy of needs in a new package.He said that the consumers, not technologists, will decide what technology will spread. Perhaps everything will be possible technologically at some point in time, but people will decide what kind of technology is needed.
Siilasmaa was worried about the lower investments in information society in European Community vs. North America. This will lead to many problems in Europe. The investments in IT are rising 14 % pa in NA and 11 % in Europe.
90% right. (Score:1)
3-instruction long VLIW
probably some MMU support
Sure! At least two virtual memory subsystems.
maybe some support for x86 instruction emulation
Sure, FPU, Lock prefix, Debug registers...
a meta-OS that hosts the recompilation stuff
Right again.
Re:Some speculation about Transmeta's activities (Score:1)
No matter what it looks like, there isn't a
Re:guess: multiple personality processor (Score:1)
This could also make the idea of vmware obsolete, imagine being able to save/restore the machine state to special areas of disk/memory. You could cycle through operating systems rather than terminals using alt + F key.
No matter what it looks like, there isn't a
Re:Coolest company? (Score:1)
Comdex Registration Priority Code & info (Score:4)
Warning, if you don't already have a hotel to stay, be forwarned, the prices around town skyrocket when comdex is in town. Get a hotel room off the strip, like at a Station Hotel/Casio [stationcasinos.com], or a Boyd Hotel/Casino [boydgaming.com] Good L
Cut of pool for TM emplooyees (Score:1)
~GoRK
more guessing (Score:2)
And instead of a silicon chip, it will use a greenish gel containing DNA-based computing elements. And when it crashes, the gel turns blue -- the blue goo of death (BGOD)