Transmeta TM8800 And Ultraportable Announced 116
yerdaddie writes "The just-released Transmeta TM8800 has been integrated into a new ultraportable from Sharp. The smaller 90nm variety clocks and performs better than the older 130nm TM86XX Efficeons. It also seems the Orion Multisystems personal clusters discussed earlier on slashdot will be built around this processor variant. Hopefully Transmeta will be releasing a developer kit soon for eager hardware hackers."
Well (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Interesting but (Score:5, Informative)
Wake up!Sharp does build a ultraportable for Linux (Score:2, Informative)
I have dual partition with Fedora Core 2 and Debian Sarge installed on my MM20. Check out the web site for more details.
Welcome back from your deep sleep.
http://www.emperorlinux.com/meteor.php
Re:Interesting but (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Interesting but (Score:3, Informative)
I own a small Thinkpad X31 and Linux couldn't be happier on this machine than any other. At least I can just imagine what will happen if I run Linux on my friends' Toshibas, Fujitsus, Dells, HPs, and what-nots.
IBM's the real deal, no poppycock Win-anything!
Re:Interesting but (Score:2)
Except the Win-dows you are required to purchase with the machine, with profits sent to Microsoft. That's the deal-breaker for me.
Re:Interesting but (Score:1)
Battery life (Score:2)
Re:Battery life (Score:4, Informative)
"With the economical electrical design, approximately 5.0 hours* actualizing the long haul drive. In addition, if the MOBILE switch was changed to MOBILE mode, CPU throughput and picture brightness were held down, it becomes setting of electric power consumption concern."
Re:Battery life (Score:2)
Re:Battery life (Score:1)
Re:Battery life (Score:2)
Re:Battery life (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Battery life (Score:1)
I could link my laptop to a UPS to claim that it can last 30hours.
Another Link (Score:5, Informative)
Another Link provides some extra info.
Enthusiasts? (Score:1)
Re:Enthusiasts? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Enthusiasts? (Score:2)
This way you low-power, low-heat VIA CPU can focus on other stuff than video decode/encryption.
Re:Enthusiasts? (Score:1)
First there was this VIA Rhine-based network adapter (D-Link DFE530TX), which looked cool and I bought 8 of them (for me and friends). One year later, as 100Mbps ethernet networks were becoming more popular, we realized that the Rhine would fail under moderate to heavy load. There was apparently an undocumented hardware design problem which had to be worked around in drivers, at the price of perfo
transmeta cpus (Score:5, Interesting)
Easy (Score:2, Insightful)
Etc...
Its a space/size thing... I'm sure they could make one if they wanted but I doubt the demand would be enough to warrant the manufacturing costs (don't forget Transmeta pays TSMC or UMC to make the chips for them).
FWIW
Re:Easy (Score:2)
Yes, the chips are small. But it is possible to make them support a socket (how do you think they get tested?). I advise you to wait. If enough people want them, it'll happen. The first 1.6GHz Efficeons are only a few weeks old, you don't stock-pile 100,000 chips before you let loose to market!
FYI, the new 90nm (it's no secret) are fabbed at Fujitsu, not TSMC or UMC. It's never been UMC. IBM was one of the earlier ones.
The thing that saves you
Re:Easy (Score:1)
transmeta is so cool but.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Love to put to get a mythtv box with a transmeta chip at its heart but I guess that's not possible so far
Re:transmeta is so cool but.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:transmeta is so cool but.. (Score:2)
From what little I can gather from the article... (Score:5, Interesting)
1.26 kilograms (2.772 pounds)
1.6GHz Transmeta processor
Wireless B/G using an Atheros device
CD/DVD drive
Some kind of hyper-brightness ability for the screen
Windows XP SP2 (NX flag support)
ATI Mobility 7500 (probably at least 64MB RAM, since it says the laptop can play FFXI, and that's kinda video-intensive)
A switch to convert from normal-power mode to mobile-power mode (thus changing processor efficiency and other things)
Some kind of remote control a la the iPod Remote
I can't read kanji and hiragana, so I'm quite out of it.
I assume that Linux support will be forthcoming from the community for this, as Sharp states that they recommend XP Professional SP2 for this device at the top of the page.
Re:From what little I can gather from the article. (Score:2)
10.4" screen (Do they use inches for screen size in Japan??)
I know next to nothing about Japanese, so grain of salt for us all!
Pan
Re:From what little I can gather from the article. (Score:1)
Does anyone know if the new Transmeta processor is any better than the older ones?
If AMD vs Intel has thought us anything, it certainly proves that clockspeed does not equal to performance!
While Transmetas are really great power-wise (even predating the Pentium Ms), I really wonder if they can hold their own speedwise when compared to a 1.6Ghz Centrino processor.
Anyway the Pentium Ms are pretty good.
Linux support for Sharp Mebius/Actius (Score:2, Interesting)
More info (Score:2, Informative)
Japanese Stats
What I would like to see.. (Score:1)
How about releasing a mini-itx mobo? (Score:1)
Nah, that would mean selling more processors so they won't do it.
Re:How about releasing a mini-itx mobo? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about releasing a mini-itx mobo? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about releasing a mini-itx mobo? (Score:2)
That's awsome!!! (Score:1)
Re:How about releasing a mini-itx mobo? (Score:1)
I have to ask, but why in the name of all of Satan's little helpers does this thing have both a parallel port and four (count 'em - 4!) RS-232 COM Ports? Why not replace the Printer port with a DVI-OUT, and just get rid of the COM ports alltogether? Who needs 'em?
Use as external hard drive (Score:5, Interesting)
I have been wondering how long it would take the Windows world to adopt this feature. Of course it has been shipping with every Powerbook since the very first one (I believe the Powerbook 100 back in 1990 or 1991). Of course back then it was with SCSI and now it is with Firewire leading me to wonder why they used USB?
Re:Use as external hard drive (Score:2)
Re:Use as external hard drive (Score:1)
Yeah, this feature is really good to have. Just like cars, you can actually use one laptop to bootup another dead laptop and put a OS back inside.
Except that MacOS doesn't crash so easily..
Re:Use as external hard drive (Score:3, Informative)
Pressing the letter "T" while booting will boot the computer into "target disc mode". From the mode, you can connect that laptop to any Mac with firewire and it will automatically mount and be available as an HD on the desktop.
Re:mm20-hard disk mode-poor implementation (Score:1)
Page Translation Courtesy of Systrans (Score:5, Informative)
Approximately, it builds in the thin-shaped DVD drive of 9.5mm, lightness approximately 1.28kg (PC-MP50G approximately 1.26kg)* 1 scantness approximately 28.8mm (the most thin section) actualizing the light weight compact body. With business and it can carry about lightly with private, shows the high performance of completeness ahead going out.
Due to the CD/DVD drive of built-in, the pleasure of DVD spreads e.g., you look at the movie software and the original work DVD with the business trip return and the coffee. It is the front tray system which taking in and out the disk is easy to do. In addition, if PC-MP70G of DVD multiple drive loading, it can compile television program and the image etc. of the digital video camera which were videotaped with the DVD recorder easily, can draw up original DVD. All you base are belong to Sharp
From state of power source off, the button of the substance one touch just is done, Windows(R) without starting INSTANT PLAY which start * 1it is possible DVD and CD* adopting 2. Furthermore, using the remote control headphone where volume setting and chapter operation etc. belong, because it can do, it can enjoy in portable DVD player feeling.
Letter and the picture clear vivid. It can enjoy with the image where also the DVD software and the broadband contents are beautiful brightly.
* 1 When the DVD software and the CD software are enjoyed with INSTANT PLAY, it is necessary to set the disk to drive.
* 2 It actualizesInterVideo (R )withInstant ON TM.
Low adopting the trance meta corporation make Efficeon TM TM8800 1.6GHz which is proud of the electric power consumptionhigh performance to CPU. High operational frequency is actualized without increasing electric power consumption with adoption of 90nm process.
Trance meta corporation makeEfficeon TM TM8800 strengthens also security performance. The safety for virus attack such as the cord/code execution with buffer overrun is raised.
(C) 2002- 2004 SQUARE ENIX CO. and LTD. All Rights Reserved. Title Design by Yoshitaka Amano
Indicating the 3D game and streaming image etc. insmoothly with the ATI corporation make MOBILITYTM RADEON TM 7500 which corresponds to 3D. High throughput It requires "FINAL FANTASY(R) XI for Windows(R) ", it is appointed to the official operational recognition personal computer.
* 3
The game software is selling separately. With the economical electrical design, approximately 5.0 hours* actualizing the long haul drive of 4. In addition, if the MOBILE switch was changed to MOBILE mode, CPU throughput and picture brightness were held down,* 5, it becomes setting of electric power consumption concern.
* 4 It is the time when it measured Corporation electronic intelligence technical industrial association "JEITA battery methods-time measurement (Ver.1.0)" of on the basis. You can verify detailed measurement condition, in the support page classified by type of Mobius home page.Http://www.sharp.co.jp/mebius/ and actual drive time differ depending upon use environment.
* 5 The operational frequency of CPU is held down low, in initial condition display intensity from under 2nd is changed in. There are times when occurs scene falling with such as animated picture playback.
Maximum 54Mbps* 6 (standard value) building in the wireless LAN of the IEEE802.11b/g conformity which corresponds to high-speed communication. The Super G TM mode which raisestransfer rate* it corresponds to also 7. The other personal computer and the data can share "radio de chat" and network setting can be changed "entrusts Internet" and so on, can use automatically smoothly with the wireless.
* 6 Numerical value of indication is maximum with respect to theory of wireless LAN standard, is not something which shows actual data rate.
* 7 SuperGTM is the wireless LAN high-speed technology which the Atheros Communications corporation developed. SuperGTM function is used, it is necessary also for the wireless LAN equipment aheadconnectingto correspond to Super G TM.
Re:Page Translation Courtesy of Systrans (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Page Translation Courtesy of Systrans (Score:2)
this was added by Iamatlas, presumably for a laugh.
This statement is not on the original page.
Re:Page Translation Courtesy of Systrans (Score:2)
Re:Page Translation Courtesy of Systrans (Score:1)
...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, for Transmeta, this "technology" is neither new nor hard to duplicate. The Opteron (AMD) and the new Pentium IV (Intel) are both VLIW processors microprogrammed to execute the IA32-64 instruction set.
Both AMD and Intel have an R&D budget that dwarfs the annual revenue stream of Transmeta. It has had several years of losses [smartmoney.com] and will likely head into bankruptcy by the end of next year.
AMD and Intel are in a fierce battle that will destroy lesser players like Transmeta. Unfortunately for Transmeta, the IA32 processors are rapidly becoming commodities with shrinking margins.
Is there a white knight for Transmeta?
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:3, Informative)
FUD-thought (Score:3, Insightful)
Intel and AMD stockholders must be wondering what the fuck their company's have been blowing their R&D budgets on.
Smaller companies are almost always way more productive with a buck than big companies. That's why I would withhold publishing their obituary if I were you.
Remember, Apple has been g
Re:FUD-thought (Score:1)
AMD has been putting out good tech after good tech lately.
On the other hand, Intel is in some serious (steaming brown substance) if they don't buck up. Seems like they are the ones playing catch-up now.. the Pentium architecture really needs a good overhaul.
By that I meant GOOD! Our current P4s are really just extensions of the old P3 design, except they had a longer pipe line on it to
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:3, Informative)
Neither the Opteron nor the Pentium IV are VLIW processors. Both translate x86 code to micro-ops, not VLIWs. From those both companies, the Itantium is the only VLIW processor. But none of them does code morphing, unless you run a VM on it.
Re:Both Opteron and Pentium IV are VLIW. (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not sure why the grandparent post said opteron had VLIW, because it should have basically the same micro-op core as the Athlon64.
Besides, AMD technical doc 24112.pdf (Software Optimization Guide for AMD Athlon(TM) 64 and AMD Opteron(TM) Processors) doesn't seem to suggest that it is a full-on VLIW. The macro op might have one load-store with one compute (int or flo
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:2)
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:2)
The two companies have taken a dramatically different approach to things. VIA went for a VERY simple x86 core, not entirely unlike the original Pentium but with a few tweaks to the memory subsystem and bus, among other things. Transmeta, on the other hand, went for the most obscure possible way to make an x86 chip. They designed a
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:2)
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:2)
Amen.
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:1)
With the geometries constantly getting smaller, yet the physics of diffusion being the same, and the power consumption/heat dissipation rising at what seems to be a neverending inexorable rate...
Gee, guys, how long do we expect a processor to be in service these days before the inexorable laws of diffusion render the processor inoperable?
Worse yet, I suspect its degradation is probably a st
Re:...but Transmeta may not survive. (Score:1)
bolony! (Score:4, Informative)
Not INTERPRET, but rather TRANSLATE IA32 to native VLIW. The word "translate" means "compile binary to binary" here. The translated result is cached, which makes the whole thing run at a more acceptable speed.
Intel and AMD do the same thing - IA32 is translated to an internal RISC-like code. They also cache the translated code. Only they do the translation in hardware, while Transmeta does it in software.
The extra translation hardware drains extra power. The extra translation software uses up extra CPU clocks, effectively slowing down a Crusoe (or any transmeta CPU) compared to a Pentium (any recent Intel/AMD CPU) at the same clock rate. If you slow down the clock on the Pentium so that the performance equals to that of the Crusoe, you reduce the power consumption to the same level as the Crusoe as well. Or better.
So, all in all, it's a wash. All mobile CPUs throttle down the clock when possible. The maximum speed for the Pentium is higher than for a Crusoe with the same clock. The die of the Transmeta chip is smaller. That's all the difference.
Surprisingly, where Intel (not AMD) gets its edge with Pentium M has nothing to do with CPU core. It's the way they handle the L2 cache. They have a large L2 cache, but they only clock the block of it where there is an access. This saves a lot of power, while allowing for a larger L2 cache. Which has more effect on the CPU speed and power consumption than all the tricks with the core architecture.
The original idea that made Transmeta chips so attractive had nothing to do with the core architecture either. The idea was that they would not only slow down the clock, but also reduce the supply voltage accordingly, which squared the power savings compared to Intel SpeedStep. Of course, by now both Intel and AMD do the same thing, so Transmeta doesn't have an edge there any more.
AMD and Intel are in a fierce battle that will destroy lesser players like Transmeta
Not necessarily. Transmeta is in a niche market, ultra-mobile IA32 devices. As long as they stay in a niche market, they have a chance. But I doubt they could make it into the mainstream CPU market in near future.
Is there a white knight for Transmeta?
Is there an SS1 for Transmeta? Wait, wrong topic...
Re:bolony! (Score:2)
But then again Intel/AMD can do the same thing and make the micro-ops visible.
Re:bolony! (Score:2)
Then, Intel might be afraid of coming up with another Itanium.
No benchmark results for TM?? (Score:2, Interesting)
What's up with that?
Sure, it is probably 'fast enough', but I want to know how fast.
Re:No benchmark results for TM?? (Score:2)
Re:No benchmark results for TM?? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Development kits (Score:2)
CPU Efficiency Comparison (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder how the Transmetas really score...compared to PowerPCs, for example.
Re:CPU Efficiency Comparison (Score:1, Interesting)
At 2GHz it's up around 20W (higher voltage) and the performance is astounding: MUCH faster than a 2.5GHz PPC970 at integer work (for less than half the power), and faster than even a 3.4GHz Pentium 4...
Devkits? Transmeta is too closed. (Score:5, Interesting)
Transmeta is too closed to hackers. That's part of the reason it's failing. Few hackers are going to buy one of their $1000+ devkits when they can get a mini-itx board for $200. Yeah, the 'meta board can supposedly peform better without a fan, but so what? Transmeta has no clue. They could have started a revolution, instead they tried to push disruptive technology through channels that didn't want disruptive technology.
Transmeta is too closed? Don't be so sure... (Score:1, Informative)
Don't be so sure of that. I'm involved with the group that's reverse engineering the Efficeon and CMS right now.
This is from the same people who brought you the Crusoe Exposed series of articles, but the Efficeon version will be *much* more detailed. As you'll see, Transmeta should not have relied on trade secrets in lieu of more patents. There are many smart people out there and this chip can and will be exposed.
Besides, Transmeta is no longer releasing a full Eff
Re:Transmeta is too closed? Don't be so sure... (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, you've sort of proved my point. 'meta is just a VLIW chip with some special firmware on it. The real magic is in the firmware. Now, I'm not suggesting that they should open source the firmware, but when you can't socket the thing into a PC MoBo, when you can't even buy the mini-ITX board at a reasonable price, when people have to reverse-engineer basic technical data, it's DOA for any real hacker (except hackers who like to reverse-engineer!). It's for "corporate partners only". It's closed. It's dead, and that's a shame.
Re:Devkits? hey look, a mini-itx efficeon system! (Score:1)
Anybody who follows mini-itx and 'meta has known about that for months. They've also known that you can't buy it retail in onesies and twosies--nowhere. Nowhere. It's dead. There are so many other solutions out there that unless you, like Slashdot, follow 'meta out of some warped allegience to Linus, it's not even on your radar. It's dead.
Not too impressive (Score:3, Interesting)
What major advantages does this have over the 18-month-old Panasonic W2 [dynamism.com] other than a slightly better video card and smaller footprint? The W2 weighs 2.8 pounds, has a DVD-RW, 12.1" screen, big keyboard, 1.1 GHz CPU, and its battery lasts over 7 hours.
In the USA, we get the older version [panasonic.com] of the W2, but it's still some-tasty.
On a side note, some tips for running Linux on the W2:
- Red Hat [pragmatic-c.com]
- Debian [uq.edu.au]
- leog forum [leog.net]
Re:Not too impressive (Score:2)
nice ultraportables site (Score:1)