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June 22,
2001
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By Bruce Gain
June 22, 2001
EBN |
Transmeta Corp. has chosen Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
Co. to make its next generation Crusoe TM5800 and TM5500
processors, sparking speculation that Transmeta will
eventually opt for TSMC to serve as its primary fab source
instead of IBM Corp. In February, EBN reported that IBM,
which late last year reversed a decision to use Transmeta
Corp.'s Crusoe microprocessor in a notebook computer, would no
longer be the exclusive foundry supplier to Transmeta after
TSMC was signed as a second source. |
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June 21, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Transmeta Corp. and Seiko Epson Corp. here today announced
that they will co-develop a future line of "energy-saving"
microprocessors, chip sets, and other products for notebook
PCs and Internet appliances. Under the terms, the companies
will co-develop low-power processors that combines Transmeta's
Crusoe family of x86-based MPUs and Seko Epson's
"energy-saving" chip technology.
The companies are cooperating on several other fronts.
First, Seiko Epson and Transmeta will establish a cooperative
relationship toward the development of a technology
partnership or alliance in the Internet appliances field. |
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By Tiffany Kary
June 21, 2001
C/Net |
Shares of Transmeta were pummeled Thursday after the company
issued a revenue warning and analysts downgraded the stock.
Transmeta, which makes power-saving chips for notebook
computers and Internet appliances, closed down $7.24, or 57
percent, at $5.36.
Transmeta said second-quarter revenue would be down 40
percent to 45 percent compared with revenue of $18.6 million
for the first quarter of 2001. That would put revenue around
$10.2 million to $11.2 million. First Call's estimate had
predicted revenue of $19.6 million. Transmeta blamed economic
weakness in Japan, its primary market. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
June 21, 2001
The Inquirer |
SOURCES CLOSE TO Dell Limerick are telling The Inquirer of a
strange twist in the continuing rumour that it may use AMD
microprocessors in some machines it makes. As with other
similar rumours over the last two years it has to be taken
with a big pinch of salt but at least it's not the usual
Dell-AMD speculation.
And if it's true, we'll have to get down on our knees in
front of analyst Eric Ross at Wiesel and beg him for mercy. |
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By Mike Magee
June 21, 2001
The Inquirer |
SOURCES CLOSE TO ALi say that the chipset firm is pushing
Intel to take legal action against Via over its Pentium 4 P4X
266 chipset. SiS too, wishes Intel to draw a line in the
sand for the same reasons, with Via's P4X 266 expected to cost
$28 at launch in August.
Intel's own Brookdale DDR will tentatively be priced at
$40, while ALi and SiS, both of which have licences from
Intel, are forced to pay $5 per chipset over the odds to the
chip giant. |
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By Mike Magee
June 21, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE CEO OF INTEL told the massed ranks of British hackery
yesterday that the firm will continue its price war with AMD
and will even intensify it over the months to come. Craig
Barrett, speaking in a Thameside location yesterday, told The
Inquirer that Intel has no intention of relinquishing market
share to AMD.
Barrett said that Intel will continue to develop its
technology while hanging on to its market share. "Our attitude
is we've had 80 per cent market share for the last five years
and our inten is to stay at that level or even move upward." |
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By Mike Magee
June 22, 2001
The Inquirer |
LIKE OUR DELL story elsewhere, this clearly falls into the
class of rumour but there may well be some elements of truth
within the tale. According to an individual who works at
Compaq, there are persistent rumours that the firm, which as
we reveal elsewhere is in all kinds of bother, is considering
selling off a set of jewels in its crown known as the Alpha
design team. |
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June 21,
2001
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June 20, 2001
Electronic News |
Transmeta Corp. today said it expects its quarterly revenue to
decline 40 percent to 45 percent from the previous quarter’s
$18.6 million. Santa Clara, Calif.-based Transmeta (nasdaq:
TMTA) cited a reduction in unit volume shipments to its major
customers in the second quarter, ending June 30, as the chief
reason for its sharp revenue decline.
“Our business is presently based primarily in Japan, which
now appears to be experiencing the economic weakness that
affected other parts of the world earlier this year,” said
Mark K. Allen, Transmeta’s president and chief executive
officer, in a statement. “In conjunction with this projected
revenue decrease and our planned transition to a new
manufacturing process for the second half of 2001 using
0.13-micron technology, we are also analyzing our inventory
levels of existing products and expect that we will take an
inventory charge during the second quarter.” |
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By Steven Scheer
June 18, 2001
Reuters |
Intel Corp. chief executive Craig Barrett said on Monday that
a deceleration in the global computer industry had put off a
decision on whether to build a new chip plant in Israel.
``We have not made a decision to go forward for economic
reasons,'' Barrett told reporters in Jerusalem. ``There is a
slowdown in the industry and that's tempered the need for
expansion. But we are still evaluating our options.''
Intel, the world's largest chip maker, said earlier this
year it was considering building a new $3.5 billion chip plant
next to its current facility in the southern city of Kiryat
Gat and the Israeli government had said it would provide Intel
with a grant to help finance the plant. |
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June 20, 2001
San Jose Mercury News |
U.S. semiconductor maker Intel said on Wednesday it needed to
see a recovery in the chip market within six months or it
would consider cutting capacity and investments next year.
Intel Chief Executive Craig Barrett, travelling through Europe
this week, also said delays in building factories in Israel
and Ireland would not affect Intel's $7.5 billion investment
plans this year, but could affect next year's budget.
The U.S. company, by far the world's largest chip maker,
stands out as the only semiconductor maker that has so far
stuck to its investment plans, both in research as well as new
factories and equipment. |
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June 20, 2001
InformationWeek.com |
So much for optimism. Despite some upbeat comments in recent
weeks from leading PC chipmakers Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
and Intel, some industry watchers aren't convinced. Citing
concerns over weak demand, price pressures, and high channel
inventories, analysts at Merrill Lynch lowered sales estimates
for AMD after the close of markets Tuesday while Lehman Bros.
cut estimates for both companies Wednesday morning. In a
research bulletin, Merrill Lynch's Joe Osha predicts AMD will
sell 1 million fewer chips in the second quarter compared with
the first, down to 6.3 million units. As a result, Osha says,
AMD will likely post per-share second-quarter earnings of only
22 cents, five cents below the consensus estimate of 27 cents.
Last year, AMD reported second-quarter earnings of $1.21 on
record revenue of $1.17 billion. Earlier this month, AMD
president and chief operating officer Hector Ruiz said he
expects the company to post modest revenue growth this year.
AMD is expected to report second-quarter earnings on July 12. |
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By Fiona Harvey
June 20, 2001
FT.COM |
Intel has reached the bottom of the downturn in the
semiconductor business, Craig Barrett, chief executive, said
on Wednesday. "We think the bottom of the trough and
seasonality in the second half should give some uptick," he
said.
While admitting that he could not give firm evidence for
his "feeling" about the end of the downturn, he repeated: "We
are bouncing along what we perceive to be the bottom." |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
June 18, 2001
The Inquirer |
INTEL ITANIC processors are in short supply and that's because
there's demand for them in the channel, The Inquirer can
report. But the reason why there's demand for them in the
channel is complicated and involves system integrators' most
unfavourite company right now, API.
As we have reported here earlier, Samsung, which together
with Compaq made that joint venture called Alpha Processors
Ink, wants to spin API off, hopefully late summer or perhaps
in autumn, when everything is looking rosier. |
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By Andrew Thomas
June 18, 2001
The Inquirer |
ON A number of occasions, stories failing to show AMD in an
exclusively-positive light have resulted in readers offering
to pop round and help me install a Pentium 4 in what sounds
like a very uncomfortable place. Not only are all those pins
very sharp, but installing a heatsink would certainly bring
tears to the eyes. No amount of thermal grease would help
here, we suspect.
But at least we've finally discovered why Athlons and
Durons aren't deemed suitable for rectal fitment. Whilst
leafing through the spec sheet for AMD's 762 chip, we came
across the following caveat: ... |
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By Eva Glass
June 19, 2001
The Inquirer |
WE HAVE WATCHED the downward decline of the Rambus share price
with some interest over the last several years. Yesterday,
the share price closed on Wall Street at $10.19 - it dropped
by over seven per cent over the day at volumes of 2.3 million
- its average volume is over the 5 million mark.
We suspect that RMBS will manage to avoid dropping below
the psychologically tense $10 mark today, largely as a result
of a fake market recovery sparked by Oracle. |
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By Drew Cullen
June 20, 2001
The Register |
Here comes another profit warning, this time from Transmeta,
the low-power Crusoe CPU designer. Sales in Q2 (ending June
30) will be 40-45 per cent down on Q1's $18.6m t/o. The
company is also transitioning in the second half of the year
to 0.13micron production. The upshot will be an inventory
charge - amount so far unspecified. Transmeta blames a
slowdown in Japan - most of its customers are Japanese
hardware vendors and, presumably, most of their customers are
Japanese also. |
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By Marco Fumagalli
June 18, 2001
The Inquirer |
ALTHOUGH INTEL CONFIRMED the price of some Celeronicas
decreased first thing today, there are sharp decreases in the
price of several top-end Pentium III models. In the spot
market, the 1GHz Pentium III fell to $175, the 933MHz to $170
and the 866MHz to $150.
And, although there seem to be no official changes in
prices for AMD 1GHz and 1.2GHz Athlons, there is heavy
pressure on their prices too in the spot market, with the 1GHz
priced at a ridiculous $95 and the 1.2GHz Athlon at an
equally ridiculous $105-$110. |
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By Mike Magee
June 20, 2001
The Inquirer |
REPORTS in the Taiwanese press said that Via will introduce
its Pentium 4 chipset at no more than $35, a move set to
further irritate the chip giant. The P42X66 double data rate
(DDR) chipset is expected to be introduced in August and Via
hopes motherboard makers will adopt it wholesale.
Intel's own Brookdale DDR chipset is not expected to be
available until the first quarter of next year, although it
will have the i845 chipset which uses synchronous memory out
by September. |
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By Eva Glass
June 19, 2001
The Inquirer |
ACE'S HARDWARE is always good at the kind of in-depth thingie
you find at few other places in such detail. Over here, the
lads are chatting about the branch prediction AMD's sixty four
bit Hammerchip will have, which is well worth a read.
Meanwhile, Tom's Hardware Guide is declaring it has the
exclusive on the grafficky things that SiS and Trident are
doing.
Anandtech, which has turned into a large corporate site
according to Tech Report, has got a great big comparison of
IDE Raid systems and you can find that ici la. |
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June 18,
2001
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By Sara Sowah
June 15, 2001
Electronics Times |
Intel's double data rate (DDR) version of the Brookdale
Chipset could be behind the times before it even hits the
market. Intel's first foray into DDR will hit 200 or
266Mbit/s when it is launched early next year. But it will be
slower than offerings from other memory manufacturers,
competitors claim.
Dean Klein, vice-president of Micron Technology's
integrated technology group, says next year the focus for DDR
activity will shift to DDR300: "DDR 333 will be the most
likely stopping point, where a number of platforms will come
to rest for 2002." |
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By Chris Angelini
June 15, 2001
Source Magazine |
It is hard to believe that Intel's Pentium moniker has taken
the consumer desktop market from 60MHz to nearly 2GHz, all in
the course of eight years. Spanning three micro-architectures
and twelve product lines, the Pentium brand name commands
recognition on a worldwide basis in value, mid-range, and
performance systems. As such, it is highly unlikely that Intel
will relinquish the name of their signature processor line any
time soon. What, then, can be expected from Intel's Pentium in
today's highly competitive marketplace? Where will the Pentium
be this time next year? For a clearer understanding of how
Intel intends to position their Pentium line, lets first take
a look at where the Pentium has already been. |
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Martyn Williams
June 14, 2001
IDG News Service |
Transmeta is raising the stakes in the battle of the notebook
processors. The company plans to begin shipping a 1-GHz
version of its Crusoe processor in the third quarter of this
year, a spokesperson for the company said Thursday. The plans
were divulged during Transmeta's Crusoe Seminar in Tokyo.
Intel, which currently dominates the market , plans to
begin shipping a low-power version of its Pentium 3 chip
during the third quarter. Code-named Tualatin, the new chip
will be produced using a 0.13 micron process. Samples of a
notebook based on a 1.16-GHz version of the chip were on
display by Intel at the recent Computex show in Taiwan. |
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June 15, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Prices for PC motherboards based on Intel Corp.'s Pentium 4
microprocessor are expected to tumble by 25% or more--that is
for products built around the company's new SDRAM-enabled
Brookdale chip set, according to Asian board makers. The
Brookdale-enabled Pentium 4 boards are expected to narrow the
wide and troublesome price gap between these products and
motherboards built around the aging Pentium III processor,
according to analysts. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
June 15, 2001
The Inquirer |
NOT ONLY do the latest Tualatin microprocessors run cool as
cool can be, but if you bung them in a dual processor
configuration they will thrash the pants off dual Foster
Xeons, The Inquirer can reveal. Sources at La Intella tell
us that because of this strange and uncomfortable fact, Intel
will never produce or allow to be produced any such
configurations.
One engineer who saw the results of the systems La had put
together for herself, told us that the benchmarks from the
dual Tualatin "were quite astonishing". |
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By Mike Magee
June 14, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE INQUIRER is pleased to put on record that the whole world
- including Santa Clara chip giant La Intella - is confused
about where it is positioning its .13 micron Tualatin
processors. That's the bad news. The good news (for INTC
shareholders, at least), is that the delays, wishy-washiness
about its plans, and the internal politics haven't affected
The Firm's ability to move to .13 micron processing, That has
gone very well, as we reported here before. |
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By Tony Dennis
June 15, 2001
The Inquirer |
INTEL WILL come up against "a blue wall of Qualcomm" if it
attempts to enter the mobile handset space, according to Ed
Knowlton, senior director for marcomms with Qualcomm. The
company claims nearly 50 handset manufacturers worldwide are
presently using its products including even Nokia which
finally accepted its fate and has used some Qualcomm
components. This makes Qualcomm the largest 'fab-less' chip
manufacturer in the world - an interesting claim since many of
its offerings are ARM based. |
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By Mike Magee
June 17, 2001
The Inquirer |
CANADIAN OUTFIT ATI, which has a 'special relationship' with
Intel which Nvidia will never have, has plans to implement
fresh graphics adventures as a counter to Nvidia and AMD, we
have learned. It will further integrate UMA after
experiments with ALi chipsets, such as the 1535.
But here it all gets too political, because as far as we
can tell, both Via and Intel are privy to these parts and to
these plans. |
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By Andrew Thomas
June 15, 2001
The Inquirer |
Isonics, whose 'Super Silicon' Si-28 wafers promise chips
running cooler than an ice-cool beer at a Fun Lovin' Criminals
gig in Antarctica, this week refused to confirm or deny an AMD
connection with its wonder wafers. In an open letter to
shareholders, James E. Alexander, Isonics' president and CEO
begins:
"Dear Shareholder, ... |
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By Mike Magee
June 16, 2001
The Inquirer |
HOW FAST CAN Via get its Pentium 4 DDR chipset designs out the
door, and should Intel wheel its Dunlap engine into action
against the plucky Taiwanese firm? These are the questions
Intel executives should be asking if they're not already, the
INQUIRER thinks.
When a senior VP blew several fuses and described the Via
performance results at Computex as "bogus", we expected the
Dunlap tumbrils to wheel swiftly into action, puncturing
balloons and ripping down flags while simultaneously issuing
writs in every geography and even in some geographies that
haven't been colonised yet - the so-called virgin territories. |
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By Tony Smith
June 15, 2001
The Register |
VIA will launch its Pentium 4-oriented DDR SDRAM-based
chipset, the P4X266, in August and is busy signing up mobo
makers in time for the big day. The Taiwanese chip maker
officially announced the product earlier this month.
VIA wants to ensure it's ahead of other Taiwanese chip
makers who have been granted P4 licences by Intel.
Intel-backed chipset vendors SIS and Acer Labs are known to be
working on P4 DDR chipsets, but they are not expected to ship
them in volume until Q4. |
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By Tony Smith
June 15, 2001
The Register |
VIA will take its x86-compatible processor line to 2GHz and
beyond during the second half of 2002 with Esther (the latest
of its biblically inspired codenames), the second chip to
sport the C4 brand. Little is known about the newest
addition to VIA's roadmap, but VIA Hardware has been able to
glean the following information: Esther's core is called the
C5Y and that it will be a 0.1 micron part.
Esther will be the successor to the already-roadmapped
Nehemiah, aka the C5X, or the VIA C4, to give it its new
official name. Nehemiah will be fabbed at 0.13 micron and
debut during Q4. It will ship at 1.2GHz. |
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By Tony Smith
June 15, 2001
The Register |
Acer Labs has formed an R&D team to produce Rambus-based
chipsets and has already begun consulting mobo makers about
what they would like to see in the company's RDRAM products.
So claim sources cited by DigiTimes. Acer Labs is one of the
few companies to have a licence from Rambus to develop RDRAM-based
chipsets.
Does the world need another Rambus chipset though?
Certainly Intel's Pentium 4 price cuts have led to an increase
in demand for Rambus-based motherboards, but since that market
is well catered for by Intel's 850 chipset, and with SDR and
DDR SDRAM chipsets coming for the P4, demand for RDRAM
chipsets seems unlikely to grow significantly. |
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By Mike Magee
June 15, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN a Tualatin Pentium III with 512K and
256K is that the latter has been subjected to the type of
treatment stone subs imposed on type in the old days of hot
metal. When a page was laid out in the form and an error was
subsequently discovered in the type, the stone sub would get
out her or his hammer and chisel out the offending letters.
Apparently, Intel has been clever enough to create masses
of Tualatin's with 512K cache but wants to differentiate the
desktop models by charging different sums for what is,
essentially, the same chip. |
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By Mike Magee
June 17, 2001
The Inquirer |
THAT LAD JC at JC's has spotted a piece at Akiba reckoning AMD
is slowing down its Athlon gintrap and intro-ing several
different lesser revs between now and Yule. This is nothing
to do with technology, we can confidently report, and
everything to do with market demand, which is far slower than
AMD expected or for that matter anticipated.
Course it's true to say that Intel had already delivered
Megahurts Hell to AMD by delivering a 1.7 Pentium 4, but the
benchmarketing seemed to suggest that most Athlons could trash
a P4 at that speed. AMD has only just delivered a 1.4GHz
Athlon and that is in scanty quantity so far, although as
little as a month ago it was able to speak loudly about 1.8GHz
Athlons this year. Well, you're just going to have to wait for
them - maybe. |
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By Mike Magee
June 16, 2001
The Inquirer |
IS IT POSSIBLE TO be a poet and a signal integrity engineer?
Certainly, it appears to be possible if you are a Mr J.
Dowling, an engineer at Advanced Micro Devices in Austin, who
not only appears to be the wizard that has brought
point-to-point multiprocessing to the AMD Athlon platform, but
is also capable of drafting job ads that would make Bill
Shakespeare hesitate before he picked up his goose feather and
scratched a sonnet out once more. |