
Transmeta
And licenses computing, microprocessor and semiconductor technologies and related intellectual property.
Date | Investors | Amount | Round |
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investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
N/A | €0.0 | round | |
$256m Valuation: $256m | Acquisition | ||
Total Funding | 000k |














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Transmeta Corporation was a fabless semiconductor company established in 1995 by a team that included Bob Cmelik, Dave Ditzel, Colin Hunter, Ed Kelly, Doug Laird, Malcolm Wing, and Greg Zyner. Co-founder Dave Ditzel, who had previously been the CTO at Sun Microsystems and a key figure in the development of RISC architecture, served as the initial CEO. His background in balancing hardware and software trade-offs was central to Transmeta's approach. The company operated in stealth mode for its first five years, generating significant speculation, which was further fueled by the hiring of Linux creator Linus Torvalds in 1997.
The company's business was centered on designing low-power x86-compatible microprocessors for the emerging mobile computing market, including notebooks, tablet PCs, and blade servers. As a fabless company, Transmeta designed its chips but outsourced the manufacturing to partners like IBM and later, TSMC. The firm's revenue model initially revolved around the sale of these processors to Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs). A major public milestone was its IPO on November 7, 2000, which saw its stock price surge on the first day of trading.
Transmeta's core product was a unique microprocessor architecture that utilized a technology called "Code Morphing Software" (CMS). This software layer acted as a dynamic binary translator, converting x86 instructions on-the-fly into the processor's native Very Long Instruction Word (VLIW) instruction set. This software-hardware hybrid approach allowed for a simpler, smaller hardware core with significantly fewer transistors, which in turn reduced power consumption and heat generation. The CMS would interpret and profile code, and for frequently executed blocks, it would generate highly optimized translations stored in a cache. Key products included the Crusoe processor, launched in January 2000, and its more powerful successor, the Efficeon, released in 2003. The company also developed advanced power management technologies, notably LongRun and LongRun2, which dynamically adjusted the processor's voltage and clock frequency based on application demand.
Despite its novel approach, Transmeta faced significant challenges. Its processors' performance often fell short of initial projections, and it struggled to compete with industry giants Intel and AMD, who quickly began addressing power consumption in their own mobile chips. Manufacturing delays and issues with fabrication partners also impacted the supply of its chips. In 2005, the company began a strategic shift, moving away from selling processors to focus on licensing its extensive intellectual property portfolio, including its power management and code morphing technologies. By 2007, Transmeta had officially ceased hardware development to become a pure IP licensing firm, a move that involved significant layoffs. The company was acquired by Novafora, a digital video processor company, for approximately $256 million in a deal finalized in January 2009. Soon after, Transmeta's patent portfolio was sold to Intellectual Ventures, and Novafora itself ceased operations later that year.
Keywords: fabless semiconductor, low-power microprocessors, Code Morphing Software, x86 compatible, VLIW, dynamic binary translation, Crusoe processor, Efficeon processor, LongRun power management, intellectual property licensing, mobile computing, David Ditzel, Linus Torvalds, semiconductor history, processor design, power efficiency, hardware-software hybrid, chip design, CPU architecture, patent portfolio, Novafora, Intellectual Ventures