A Year Ago: Crusoe chip gets first suitor
News It didn't take long for the Crusoe to be noticed and S3 reckons it knows just where to put the nifty little chip. The first consumer product based on the Crusoe microprocessor from Transmeta will be announced in the US Thursday by consumer...
[January 20, 2001, 6:06]
Crusoe chip gets first suitor
News The first consumer product based on the Crusoe microprocessor from Transmeta will be announced in the US Thursday by consumer technology firm S3. S3, which bought Diamond Multimedia last year, is perhaps better known for its work with video cards...
[January 20, 2000, 17:37]
Crusoe chip mystery to be revealed
News Crusoe is expected to be the first implementation of this technology. At least until Wednesday, when the company will lift its veil of secrecy at an event in Silicon Valley and reveal details behind its mysterious new processor named Crusoe.
[January 17, 2000, 8:56]
Crusoe discovers the desktop
News Chipmaker Transmeta and Japanese PC giant NEC have announced the first desktop computer running on Transmeta's innovative Crusoe processors, a move that puts Crusoe more squarely into competition with the likes of Intel and AMD.
[May 9, 2002, 14:10]
TechXNY: Crusoe squeezes into Meta Pad spinoff
News Antelope, a company that makes mobile computing devices for niche markets, said on Wednesday that it will use Transmeta's Crusoe TM5800 in an upcoming device based on IBM's "Meta Pad" technology, a device the size of a PDA that morphs into a...
[June 26, 2002, 16:50]
Crusoe's ripple effect on Psion, ARM, others
News With the high-profile launch of Transmeta's new microprocessor Crusoe, aimed at portable devices, chipmakers such as Intel, Advanced Micro Devices and Cyrix aren't the only companies who could be affected.
[January 20, 2000, 17:10]
News Burst: Crusoe chip gets first suitor
News The first product based on the Crusoe microprocessor from Transmeta, will be announced Thursday by consumer technology firm S3. S3, which bought Diamond Multimedia last year and is better known for its work with video cards and MP3 players, will...
[January 20, 2000, 13:40]
Transmeta makes minuscule Crusoe chips
News Transmeta on Monday revealed a pair of Crusoe processors designed for anything but a PC. The company, which made a name for itself by designing small, power-efficient chips for notebooks, said it designed the new Crusoe TM5700 and TM5900 chips to...
[January 5, 2004, 15:40]
News Burst: Hitachi goes for Crusoe
News Japanese electronics leader Hitachi has said it will use Transmeta's Crusoe chips in notebook computers later this year, stepping up competition against Intel and Advanced Micro Devices. Hitachi joins Sony, IBM, Gateway, Quanta, Toshiba, Fujitsu...
[September 7, 2000, 13:03]
Eye2Eye: David Potter - Gates, ARM and the Crusoe
News I asked him about the recently announced Crusoe chip and whether any Symbian devices would ever use the maverick new processor. To be quite honest, I can't give you a definitive answer because I just don't know enough about the Crusoe chip.
[February 23, 2000, 11:41]
New Crusoe notebook to hit US shores
News Transmeta got some welcome news Monday as Fujitsu announced it is bringing to the United States a notebook PC using the latest low-power Crusoe processor from the struggling chipmaker. However, Brookwood said Transmeta still faces challenges in...
[October 23, 2001, 9:09]
Intel launches new Crusoe-killers
News Transmeta, with its Crusoe processor, has aggressively targeted the ultra-light niche. Transmeta sent shockwaves through the notebook market last year with the announcement of its Crusoe chip, which consumed far less power than similar processors...
[May 21, 2001, 16:02]
Corel chief dismisses Crusoe
News Canadian software giant Corel has already dismissed the idea of developing software for the Crusoe family of microprocessors, according to president and CEO Michael Cowpland. The Crusoe family of processors are designed from the ground up to...
[February 25, 2000, 6:30]
Will Crusoe perform?
News The new Crusoe mobile processor from Transmeta has at last hit store shelves, but critics are already sniping about its performance. Because of Crusoe's unusual architecture, standard benchmark tests are unlikely to reflect actual user experience...
[October 26, 2000, 15:26]
News Burst: Not everyone's jumping for Crusoe
News While Crusoe's ship appears to have come in here at PC Expo, some large PC makers have decided to hold off on adopting the new Transmeta chip for notebook PCs. At least for now. Full story to follow. What do you think?
[June 28, 2000, 15:11]
Transmeta dismisses Intel's FUD over Crusoe
News Microprocessor newcomer Transmeta says suggestions by Intel that its Crusoe chip isn't fully compatible with Windows software are unfounded. The comments follow remarks made by Intel at a recent briefing where it raised doubts about whether Crusoe...
[July 20, 2000, 12:35]
Next Crusoe chip bogged down in testing
News Transmeta is having trouble getting its next Crusoe chip out the door. Four months after it was first announced, the energy-efficient Crusoe 5800 still isn't shipping in production volumes to notebook makers.
[October 10, 2001, 9:45]
ARM shares tumble as Transmeta readies Crusoe
News Shares in mobile microchip manufacturer ARM (quote: ARM) have fallen dramatically in anticipation of the launch of the much-talked-about new Crusoe processor from silicon start-up Transmeta. Passion for ARM shares has been significantly dampened by...
[January 19, 2000, 15:44]
Compaq, Dell shy off Crusoe chip
News While Crusoe's ship appears to have come in, some large PC makers have decided to hold off on adopting the new chip for notebook PCs. As the temperature soared past 90 degrees, Transmeta showed off its cool-running TM 5400 Crusoe chip for notebook...
[June 29, 2000, 7:06]
IBM to offer Crusoe ThinkPads
News Computer manufacturer IBM claims it will demonstrate Thinkpad notebooks featuring Transmeta's Crusoe processors at the PC Expo in New York this month, according to reports Tuesday. Last month Transmeta said that the show would reveal a number of...
[June 6, 2000, 13:41]



