Skip to main content

Intel and Transmeta Settle Patent Dispute

Intel and Transmeta Settle Patent Dispute

Chipmakers Intel and Transmeta have settled their patent dispute, with Intel agreeing to pay Transmeta some $250 million dollars to settle all claims and get a perpetual, non-exclusive license to all Transmeta patents and patent applications for the next ten years. Intel is to pay Transmeta $150 million up front, then $20 million a year for the next five years.

“We are very pleased to have reached this agreement with Intel,” said Transmeta CEO and president Les Crudele, in a statement. “We believe that this arrangement will create value for Transmeta stockholders both by realizing immediate financial value for our intellectual property rights and by supporting our technology development and licensing business going forward.”

A year ago, Transmeta sued Intel claiming the mammoth chipmaker violated 10 Transmeta patents involving processor design and power utilization techniques in microprocessors. All but one of the patents covered processor functions, while the tenth related to changing a processor’s voltage based on its load. In January of this year, Intel countersued Transmeta, claiming the company infringed on seven Intel patents and alleged Transmeta mischaracterized information in its patent applications.

Transmeta was founded in 1995, and tried to compete with Intel with its power-saving Crusoe processor, launched in 2000. The processor failed to catch on with computer makers, and Transmeta shifted its business model towards licensing elements of its processor technology.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Intel is already working on its third generation of graphics cards
Two intel Arc graphics cards on a pink background.

Intel has officially unveiled its next-generation Lunar Lake mobile chipset in Taiwan ahead of Computex 2024. A refined successor to Meteor Lake, Lunar Lake features a new core architecture, enhanced security, and improved power efficiency as well as Xe2 graphics.

While the new platform focuses on uplifting AI performance and capabilities, the improvements for the GPU seem to be quite captivating. What is even more interesting is that during a session for the updated GPU, a company representative said that Intel is already working on the “next one for Panther Lake generation.”

Read more
The Intel we know is dead, but its new Lunar Lake chips are very much alive
An Intel executive holding a Lunar Lake CPU.

It’s not an exaggeration to call Lunar Lake radical. The upcoming chips don't showcase the Intel we’ve seen so many times before -- the one that pushes power, core counts, and clock speeds to their limit and wonders why it can’t manage a full day’s charge in a laptop. Lunar Lake is Intel admitting defeat, but not in a way that puts it down for the count. It’s clear that Lunar Lake, announced at Computex 2024, is a fresh start.

Intel has called it a “radical low-power architecture” previously, and that statement holds true. Everything in Lunar Lake is built around power efficiency. And with that new focus, Intel is shedding all of the tentpoles of its previous generations that don’t contribute -- even down to needing to manufacture the chip in its own fabs.
A new focus

Read more