-Caveat Lector-

Transmeta debuts in Japan; U.S. release in three weeks

By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 6, 2000, 1:50 p.m. PT

URL: http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1006-200-2949585.html


The long wait for notebooks based on Transmeta's Crusoe chip has
ended, as Sony has released in Japan its first Vaio laptops
containing the chip.

Vaio PictureBook laptops containing Crusoe processors were
released in Tokyo on Saturday (Japan time), Sony executives
confirmed. For consumers, the most likely place to find the new
notebooks will be the Akihabara, Tokyo's sprawling, modern
electronics shopping area, said sources in Japan.

Sony will follow up with Crusoe-based Vaios for the U.S. market
Oct. 25, according to Mark Hanson, vice president and general
manager of Vaio PC for Sony America.

The appearance of the notebooks will mark a watershed moment in
Transmeta's history. The company has developed a family of
Intel-compatible processors that purportedly consume less power
than competing chips from Intel or Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

As a result, Transmeta notebooks promise to be thin and light
(because they need less insulation and no fans) and capable of
running longer than other notebooks on a battery charge.

To get the same performance from a standard processor "I would
have to lose some mobility by adding fans" or batteries, Hanson
said. Sony's Crusoe notebook, for instance, can run 2.5 hours to
5 hours on a single capacity battery, he said. The same notebooks
run on Intel chips would last 1.5 hours to 2.5 hours with the
same battery.

What's the catch? Transmeta's claims haven't been tested by third
parties. Although the Crusoe family debuted in January, neither
the chips nor products containing the chips have been released on
the open market. Analysts and independent benchmark testers have
also complained about a lack of access to demonstration models.

"I don't know if any third parties have been able to get one. I
know I haven't," said Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst at
Insight 64, who added, "The claims that are being made about
battery life are a bit hard to swallow. The battery life should
only improve by 10 to 20 percent."

Besides power consumption, analysts will be curious to see how
well Crusoe notebooks stack up against laptops containing Pentium
IIIs or other chips. Crusoe chips perform many functions in
software that other chips perform in hardware.

Invariably, this will cause a performance hit, Brookwood and
other chip experts have said. The question now is whether the
dent in performance is substantial or irrelevant.

Dave Ditzel, Transmeta's CEO, said in September that Crusoe-based
notebooks will perform just as well as competing chips in
real-world circumstances.

"We designed Crusoe to deliver good performance with maximum
battery life," he said.

Hanson also pointed out that the new chips will be going into
notebooks that haven't been able to take advantage of the latest
technologies from Intel or AMD. The Vaio line the Crusoe chip
will be featured in has, to date, depended on Pentium MMX or
Pentium II processors, not Pentium IIIs.

"We're getting a performance boost from where we were before," he
said.

Recently, Transmeta filed documents to raise $140 million in an
initial public offering.

The Vaio PictureBook CIVN to be released in the United States
will weigh 2.2 pounds, contain a 600-MHz Crusoe processor, and
measure less than an inch thick. It will sell for an estimated
retail price of $2,299.99, according to Sony

Both the Japanese and U.S. versions of the notebook will contain
a built-in camera that effectively allows consumers "to carry a
video camera with them," Hanson said.



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