Transmeta is a US-based corporation that makes microprocessors. Its claim to fame is the Crusoe, an x86 low-power microprocessor, used in Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs). Transmeta has employed a number of industry luminaries such as Dave Ditzel, Linus Torvalds and Dave Taylor. Initially, its purpose was kept secret, but partially because it had such talent amongst its staff, the industry was constantly abuzz with rumors in addition to 'conspiracy theories' resulting in excellent press relations (PR).
The technology behind the TM series of micro-processors is fascinating, even if the end result (from a performance perspective) was not so stunning. The actual TM processors are actually very simple VLIW cores. In order to execute x86 code, a pure software-based instruction translator would, on-demand, dynamically compile or emulate executing x86 code sequences on the fly, using execution-hotspot guided heuristics. While similar technologies existed (WABI for Sun, FX!32 for Alpha) in the early 90s, the TM approach set a much higher bar for compatibility—able to execute all x86 instructions from initial boot up to the latest multimedia instructions—while retaining most of its core performance.
There are many technical benefits to Transmeta's approach:
These capabilities seem to confirm the possibilities indicated by some of the rumors flying around prior to the release of Crusoe (that they were building a hybrid PowerPC and x86 processor—something they certainly could have done, and which they may have initially been planning, for example.) However, Transmeta has decided to concentrate solely on the extremely low-power x86 market.
During August 2003, Transmeta's debuted its latest chip, the Efficeon. Linus Torvalds has by now left Transmeta to dedicate himself to the further development of the Linux kernel.