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Transitive's Breakthrough Hardware Virtualization Products Eliminate the Need for Software Porting.


LOS GATOS Los Gatos (lôs gä`tōs, lŏs, găt`əs), city (1990 pop. 27,357), Santa Clara co., W Calif.; inc. 1887. It is an affluent residential community and health resort. , Calif. -- "QuickTransit(TM)" Software Allows Applications to Run Transparently on Multiple Hardware Platforms Each hardware platform, or CPU family, has a unique machine language. All software presented to the computer for execution must be in the binary coded machine language of that CPU. Following is a list of the major hardware platforms in existence today. See platform.  with No Source Code or Binary Changes

Transitive transitive - A relation R is transitive if x R y & y R z => x R z. Equivalence relations, pre-, partial and total orders are all transitive.  Corporation, the leading provider of software that enables transportability of applications across multiple processor and operating system operating system (OS)

Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs.
 pairs, today launched its QuickTransit(TM) product line, a family of products that allows software applications compiled for one processor and operating system to run on another processor and operating system without any source code or binary changes. The company's breakthrough hardware virtualization Providing a virtual machine capability in hardware. It refers to circuits in the processor and memory controller that enhance the running of multiple operating systems (multiple virtual machines).  technology is unique because it provides 100% functionality, transparent interactive and graphics performance, near-native computational performance, and allows virtually any processor/operating system pair to be supported.

The first products available in the QuickTransit(TM) product line are:

--QuickTransit for Itanium(R): with support for MIPS (Million Instructions Per Second) The execution speed of a computer. For example, .5 MIPS is 500,000 instructions per second; 100 MIPS is a hundred million instructions per second. (R), POWER(TM)/PowerPC(R), x86, and mainframe binaries

--QuickTransit for Opteron(R): with support for MIPS, POWER/PowerPC, and mainframe binaries

--QuickTransit for x86: with support for MIPS, POWER/PowerPC and mainframe binaries

--QuickTransit for POWER/PowerPC: with support for MIPS, x86, and mainframe binaries

The QuickTransit product line allows computer OEMs to rapidly increase the number of user-written and ISV (Independent Software Vendor) A person or company that develops software. It implies an organization that specializes in software only and is not part of a computer systems or hardware manufacturer.  (Independent Software Vendor) applications available on their platforms; it enables ISVs and internal software development groups to eliminate porting costs; and it allows IT services companies to migrate their customers' legacy applications to modern platforms at a fraction of the existing cost.

"The reality is that it's often difficult and expensive to port software applications to hardware platforms," said Bob Wiederhold, President and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of Transitive Corporation. "QuickTransit breaks the burdensome history of hardware/software dependency and therefore provides immediate benefits to the computer industry. QuickTransit dramatically reduces the cost, risk and time-to-market to support new or multiple hardware platforms, and it makes significantly more software available on computer platforms."

How QuickTransit Works

QuickTransit utilizes a unique and patented modular architecture. It runs on top of the operating system, with no end user intervention. As a translated application runs, the QuickTransit "front-end decoder" reads in blocks of binary code binary code

Code used in digital computers, based on a binary number system in which there are only two possible states, off and on, usually symbolized by 0 and 1. Whereas in a decimal system, which employs 10 digits, each digit position represents a power of 10 (100, 1,000,
 and translates them into an intermediate representation (IR). An "optimization kernel" then optimizes the code represented in the IR, and a "back-end code generator See application generator and macro recorder. " encodes the optimized blocks for the target processor and caches them. QuickTransit's high performance comes from exploiting the fact that only 10% of the code in a typical application is executed 90% of the time. So, the optimizing kernel looks for frequently executed blocks of code and aggressively optimizes them as they are identified. The QuickTransit architecture is modular, allowing front-end decoders and back-end code generators to be easily mixed and matched for the source and target environment.

QuickTransit products support applications written in any language including C, C++, Fortran, Cobol, Basic, Ada, Pascal, Modula, PL/1 and assembly language. QuickTransit products let software applications run on the target platform exactly as they run on the source platform, with 100% functionality. Graphics and interactive performance are transparent, and computational performance is 80% of what could be achieved with a native port, which is often higher performance than is available on the original platform. Today's Itanium, Xeon(TM) or POWER processors, for example, offer 10 times the computational performance of mid-1990's mainframes. Using QuickTransit software, today's processors could run the unchanged mainframe applications 8 times faster.

The system resource overhead of the translation process is small. QuickTransit itself uses only 500 KB of memory and requires approximately 10-30 MB of additional memory for large server applications, or around 25% of program memory for smaller applications.

Availability and Pricing Model

Transitive's QuickTransit products are currently available and shipping to major OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) The rebranding of equipment and selling it. The term initially referred to the company that made the products (the "original" manufacturer), but eventually became widely used to refer to the organization that buys the products and  customers. Pricing for QuickTransit products is based on a one-time technology license fee and a usage fee model that depends on the customer's deployment strategy.

Industry Analysts Comment on QuickTransit

Tony Iams, lead analyst, Systems and Software Virtualization An umbrella term for enhancing a computer's ability to do work. Following are the ways virtualization is used.

Hardware Virtualization
Partitioning the computer's memory into separate and isolated "virtual machines" simulates multiple machines within one physical computer.
, D.H. Brown Associates

"Employing new virtualization techniques, the QuickTransit family allows software compiled for one processor and operating system to efficiently run on another processor and operating system, while maintaining full functionality. Transitive's family of software migration products dramatically reduces the obstacles users face when switching hardware platforms, allowing them to preserve their software investments so that the expense and time involved in porting code is minimized."

Rob Enderle Rob Enderle, founder of the Enderle Group, is a consultant, writer, and widely quoted technical and legal analyst in the information technology industry. Microsoft, Advanced Micro Devices, the SCO Group, IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and Dell are (or have been) among his clients. , principal analyst, Enderle Group

"For the last 3 decades we have chased, unsuccessfully, true software portability and the cost benefits it would bring to the technology buyer. These benefits include improved reliability, the near elimination of image management, and a dramatic reduction in hardware migration costs. While inexpensive hardware and rapidly increasing performance drove the last decade it also set the stage for products like Transitive's QuickTransit which are set to redefine the current decade of reduced costs and greater flexibility."

Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst, Insight 64

"Since the dawn of the computer era, the need for binary compatibility See binary compatible.  with instruction set architectures and operating system interfaces has locked users into proprietary environments. The cost of adapting application software to run on incompatible hardware or operating systems Operating systems can be categorized by technology, ownership, licensing, working state, usage, and by many other characteristics. In practice, many of these groupings may overlap.  almost always exceeds the cost of purchasing compatible systems that run the original software without change, even if those incompatible systems cost less to acquire or operate. The failed attempts of companies that have tried to break the chains of binary compatibility that bind users to obsolete platforms litter the industry landscape. None of these earlier approaches delivered the performance needed to make their solutions useful in practice. Transitive's ability to deliver up to 80 percent of 'native' performance, when executing binary images targeted for one platform on incompatible hardware or software platforms, could be a game-changing event that restructures the computer industry."

Tony Massimini, Chief of Technology, Semico Research

"Transitive's QuickTransit is a significant enabling technology. By efficiently resolving the burdensome or even prohibitive time and cost issues of moving applications to a new platform, it gives computer OEMs a new capability to get their customers through an upgrade cycle much more quickly."

Jim Turley, principal analyst, Silicon Insider

"The more you know about it, the more amazing this gets. Transitive's QuickTransit allows software to run on 'foreign' computers. It just works, but it shouldn't. To the customer, user, or casual observer nothing special is happening and everything runs fine. To an engineer, it's amazing. Transitive has been developing and fine-tuning this technology for a number of years and they've really got it nailed down to the point where it's impressive in its simplicity."

About Transitive Corporation

Transitive Corporation is a pioneer and leader in providing solutions that allow the transportability of software applications across multiple hardware platforms. The company's hardware virtualization technology allows software applications that have been compiled for one processor/operating system to run on another without any source code or binary changes and at speeds comparable to native ports. The technology dramatically reduces software developers' cost, risk, and time-to-market of supporting multiple hardware platforms, facilitates OEM customers' migration to new platforms, and makes significantly more software available on hardware platforms. Transitive Corporation is located in Los Gatos, California “Los Gatos” redirects here. For the Argentine rock band, see Los Gatos (band).
Los Gatos is an incorporated town in Santa Clara County, California, United States. The population was 28,592 at the 2000 census.
 with a research and development team in Manchester, England. The company is privately held, with funding participation by Pond Venture Partners Ltd., Manchester Technology Fund, and Crescendo Ventures. For more information, please visit Transitive's website at http://www.transitive.com.

Transitive(TM), the Transitive logo and QuickTransit(TM) are trademarks of Transitive Corporation and/or its affiliates in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and other countries. Itanium(R) and Xeon(TM) are trademarks of Intel Corporation (company) Intel Corporation - A US microelectronics manufacturer. They produced the Intel 4004, Intel 8080, Intel 8086, Intel 80186, Intel 80286, Intel 80386, Intel 486 and Pentium microprocessor families as well as many other integrated circuits and personal computer networking . Linux(R) is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds Linus Benedict Torvalds   (born December 28 1969 in Helsinki, Finland) is a Finnish software engineer best known for initiating the development of the Linux kernel. . MIPS(R) is a registered trademark of MIPS Technologies (MIPS Technologies, Inc., Mountain View, CA, www.mips.com) Founded in 1984 as MIPS Computer Systems Inc., the company merged with SGI in 1992 and spun off as an independent entity once again in 2000. . Opteron(R) is a registered trademark of Advanced Micro Devices. POWER(TM) and PowerPC(R) are trademarks of IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries)  Corporation. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Sep 13, 2004
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