USCOURTS-Ca9-09-35307-1.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

USCOURTS-Ca9-09-35307-1.Pdf Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 1 of 67 FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES (USA) LLC; JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to Hambrecht & Quist and Chase Securities Inc.; BANK OF No. 09-35262 AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware D.C. No. 2:07-cv- corporation, successor in interest 01549-JLR to Fleetboston Robertson Stephens, Inc.; ONVIA INC., a Delaware corporation formerly known as Onvia.com Inc.; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION 821 Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 2 of 67 822 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES INC.; FOUNDRY NETWORKS INC., Nominal No. 09-35280 Defendant, a Delaware D.C. Nos. corporation; MERRILL LYNCH 2:07-cv-01566-JLR PIERCE FENNER & SMITH 2:07-cv-01549-JLR INCORPORATED; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MERRILL LYNCH & CO. INC., Defendant, and No. 09-35282 D.C. Nos. FINISAR CORPORATION, Nominal Defendant, a Delaware 2:07-cv-01567-JLR 2:07-cv-01549-JLR corporation; MERRILL LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH INCORPORATED; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 3 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 823 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MORGAN STANLEY & CO., No. 09-35285 INCORPORATED; LEHMAN BROTHERS, D.C. Nos. INC.; BANK OF AMERICA 2:07-cv-01568-JLR CORPORATION; ROBERTSON 2:07-cv-01549-JLR STEPHENS, INC.; AVANEX CORPORATION, Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP, a global bank headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland formerly known as Credit Suisse First Boston No. 09-35286 Corporation; BANK OF AMERICA D.C. Nos. CORPORATION, a Delaware 2:07-cv-01576-JLR corporation, successor in interest 2:07-cv-01549-JLR to BancBoston Robertson Stephens, Inc.; TIVO INC., Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 4 of 67 824 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS & CO., a New York limited partnership; BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to FleetBoston Robertson No. 09-35288 D.C. Nos. Stephens, Inc.; ROBERTSON STEPHENS INC., a Massachusetts 2:07-cv-01569-JLR corporation, 2:07-cv-01549-JLR Defendants-Appellees, and TURNSTONE SYSTEMS, INC., a Delaware corporation, Defendant. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 5 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 825 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS & CO., “Goldman Sachs”; CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES (USA) LLC, “Credit Suisse” formerly known as Credit Suisse No. 09-35289 First Boston Corporation; BANK OF D.C. Nos. AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware 2:07-cv-01577-JLR corporation, successor in interest 2:07-cv-01549-JLR to BancBoston Robertson Stephens, Inc.; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC.; JUNIPER NETWORKS INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 6 of 67 826 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MORGAN STANLEY & CO., No. 09-35290 INCORPORATED; DEUTSCHE BANK D.C. Nos. SECURITIES, INC.; MERRILL LYNCH, 2:07-cv-01570-JLR PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH 2:07-cv-01549-JLR INCORPORATED; ARIBA INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. No. 09-35292 MORGAN STANLEY & CO., D.C. Nos. INCORPORATED; CITIGROUP GLOBAL 2:07-cv-01571-JLR MARKETS, INC.; AKAMAI 2:07-cv-01549-JLR TECHNOLOGIES, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 7 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 827 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC., a Delaware corporation; JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to Hambrecht & Quist LLC, No. 09-35293 Defendants, D.C. Nos. and 2:07-cv-01578-JLR 2:07-cv-01549-JLR KANA SOFTWARE INC., Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation formerly known as Kana Communications Inc.; GOLDMAN SACHS & CO.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 8 of 67 828 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MORGAN STANLEY, a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Defendant, and SILICON LABORATORIES INC., No. 09-35297 Nominal Defendant, a Delaware D.C. Nos. corporation; MORGAN STANLEY & 2:07-cv-01590-JLR CO. INCORPORATED; LEHMAN 2:07-cv-01549-JLR BROTHERS INC.; CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS, INC., Defendants-Appellees, JAMES W. GIDDENS, TRUSTEE FOR THE LIQUIDATION OF THE BUSINESS OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INC., Trustee-Appellee. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 9 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 829 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC., a Delaware corporation, Defendant, and BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION, a No. 09-35300 Delaware corporation, successor in D.C. Nos. interest to BancBoston Robertson 2:07-cv-01593-JLR Stephens, Inc.; PALM INC., 2:07-cv-01549-JLR Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation; GOLDMAN SACHS & CO.; MORGAN STANLEY & CO. INCORPORATED; MERRILL LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH INCORPORATED; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 10 of 67 830 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC., Defendant, and No. 09-35301 BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION, a D.C. Nos. Delaware corporation, successor in 2:07-cv-01594-JLR interest to BancBoston Robertson 2:07-cv-01549-JLR Stephens, Inc.; MAXYGEN INC., Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation; GOLDMAN SACHS & CO.; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 11 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 831 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP, a global bank headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland FKA Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation; BANK OF No. 09-35302 AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware D.C. No. corporation, successor in interest 2:07-cv-01575-JLR to BancBoston Robertson Stephens, Inc.; SILICON IMAGE, INC., Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 12 of 67 832 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC., a Delaware corporation, No. 09-35303 Defendant, D.C. Nos. and 2:07-cv-01595-JLR 2:07-cv-01549-JLR STREET.COM INC.; GOLDMAN SACHS & CO.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to BancBoston Robertson No. 09-35306 Stephens, Inc.; CRITICAL PATH, D.C. No. INC., Nominal Defendant, a 2:07-cv-01582-JLR California corporation; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 13 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 833 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, successor in No. 09-35307 interest to BancBoston Robertson D.C. Nos. Stephens, Inc.; CONCUR 2:07-cv-01585-JLR TECHNOLOGIES, INC., a Delaware 2:07-cv-01549-JLR corporation; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES, INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP, a global bank headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland; SOURCEFORGE, INC., Nominal Defendant, a Delaware No. 09-35308 corporation, FKA VA Linux Systems, Inc.; LEHMAN BROTHERS, D.C. No. INC., 2:07-cv-01583-JLR Defendants-Appellees, JAMES W. GIDDENS, Trustee for the Liquidation of the Business of Lehman Brothers, Inc., Trustee-Appellee. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 14 of 67 834 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. No. 09-35309 GOLDMAN SACHS & CO.; J.P. D.C. Nos. MORGAN SECURITIES, INC.; RED 2:07-cv-01587-JLR HAT, INC., a Delaware corporation, 2:07-cv-01549-JLR Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP, a global No. 09-35310 bank headquartered in Zurich, D.C. No. Switzerland; SELECTICA, INC., 2:07-cv-01584-JLR Nominal Defendant, a Delaware corporation, Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 15 of 67 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 835 VANESSA SIMMONDS Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP SECURITIES (USA) LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; BANK OF No. 09-35312 AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware D.C. Nos. corporation; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, 2:07-cv-01579-JLR INC., a Massachusetts corporation, 2:07-cv-01549-JLR Defendants-Appellees, and INTERWOVEN, INC., Defendant. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MORGAN STANLEY & CO., No. 09-35313 INCORPORATED; J.P. MORGAN D.C. Nos. SECURITIES, INC.; VIGNETTE 2:07-cv-01588-JLR CORPORATION, a Delaware 2:07-cv-01549-JLR corporation, Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION Case: 09-35307 01/18/2011 ID: 7614842 DktEntry: 67 Page: 16 of 67 836 SIMMONDS v.
Recommended publications
  • Green Destiny: a 240-Node Compute Cluster in One Cubic Meter
    Green Destiny: A 240-Node Compute Cluster in One Cubic Meter Wu-chun (Wu) Feng Research & Development in Advanced Network Technology (RADIANT) Computer & Computational Sciences Division Los Alamos National Laboratory LA-UR 02-6127 Outline Where is Supercomputing? Architectures from the Top 500. Evaluating Supercomputers Metrics: Performance & Price/Performance An Alternative Flavor of Supercomputing Supercomputing in Small Spaces Æ Bladed Beowulf Architecture of a Bladed Beowulf Performance Metrics Benchmark Results Discussion & Status Conclusion Acknowledgements & Media Coverage Wu-chun Feng http://www.lanl.gov/radiant [email protected] http://sss.lanl.gov Flavors of Supercomputing (Picture Source: Thomas Sterling, Caltech & NASA JPL) Wu-chun Feng http://www.lanl.gov/radiant [email protected] http://sss.lanl.gov 500 400 SIMD Architectures from the 300 Top 500 Supercomputer List 200 100 0 ProcessorSingle Wu-chun Feng [email protected] Jun-93 Nov-93 Jun-94 MPP Nov-94 Jun-95 Nov-95 Jun-96 Constellation SMP Nov-96 Cluster Jun-97 http://www.lanl.gov/radiant Nov-97 http://sss.lanl.gov Jun-98 Nov-98 Jun-99 Nov-99 Jun-00 Nov-00 Jun-01 Nov-01 Jun-02 Metrics for Evaluating Supercomputers Performance Metric: Floating-Operations Per Second (FLOPS) Example: Japanese Earth Simulator Price/Performance Æ Cost Efficiency Metric: Cost / FLOPS Examples: SuperMike, GRAPE-5, Avalon. Wu-chun Feng http://www.lanl.gov/radiant [email protected] http://sss.lanl.gov Performance (At Any Cost) Japanese Earth Simulator ($400M) Performance Price/Perf Peak 40.00 Tflop $10.00/Mflop Linpack 35.86 Tflop $11.15/Mflop n-Body 29.50 Tflop $13.56/Mflop Climate 26.58 Tflop $15.05/Mflop Turbulence 16.40 Tflop $24.39/Mflop Fusion 14.90 Tflop $26.85/Mflop Wu-chun Feng http://www.lanl.gov/radiant [email protected] http://sss.lanl.gov Price/Performance Cost Efficiency LSU’s SuperMike Performance Price/Perf (2002: $2.8M) Linpack 2210 Gflops $1.27/Mflop U.
    [Show full text]
  • Service Manual
    , , , , , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , SERVICE MANUAL www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk Ver 1-2002J www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , , Revision History www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , PCG-GRV550 www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , , Lineup : PCG-GRV550 www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk For American Area www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk www.sonyweb.co.uk , www.sonyweb.co.uk
    [Show full text]
  • Memorandum in Opposition to Hewlett-Packard Company's Motion to Quash Intel's Subpoena Duces Tecum
    ORIGINAL UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BEFORE THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ) In the Matter of ) ) DOCKET NO. 9341 INTEL. CORPORATION, ) a corporation ) PUBLIC ) .' ) MEMORANDUM IN OPPOSITION TO HEWLETT -PACKARD COMPANY'S MOTION TO QUASH INTEL'S SUBPOENA DUCES TECUM Intel Corporation ("Intel") submits this memorandum in opposition to Hewlett-Packard Company's ("HP") motion to quash Intel's subpoena duces tecum issued on March 11,2010 ("Subpoena"). HP's motion should be denied, and it should be ordered to comply with Intel's Subpoena, as narrowed by Intel's April 19,2010 letter. Intel's Subpoena seeks documents necessary to defend against Complaint Counsel's broad allegations and claimed relief. The Complaint alleges that Intel engaged in unfair business practices that maintained its monopoly over central processing units ("CPUs") and threatened to give it a monopoly over graphics processing units ("GPUs"). See CompI. iiii 2-28. Complaint Counsel's Interrogatory Answers state that it views HP, the world's largest manufacturer of personal computers, as a centerpiece of its case. See, e.g., Complaint Counsel's Resp. and Obj. to Respondent's First Set ofInterrogatories Nos. 7-8 (attached as Exhibit A). Complaint Counsel intends to call eight HP witnesses at trial on topics crossing virtually all of HP' s business lines, including its purchases ofCPUs for its commercial desktop, commercial notebook, and server businesses. See Complaint Counsel's May 5, 2010 Revised Preliminary Witness List (attached as Exhibit B). Complaint Counsel may also call HP witnesses on other topics, including its PUBLIC FTC Docket No. 9341 Memorandum in Opposition to Hewlett-Packard Company's Motion to Quash Intel's Subpoena Duces Tecum USIDOCS 7544743\'1 assessment and purchases of GPUs and chipsets and evaluation of compilers, benchmarks, interface standards, and standard-setting bodies.
    [Show full text]
  • In Re: Fleetboston Financial Corporation Securities Litigation 02-CV
    Case 2:02-cv-04561-GEB-MCA Document 28 Filed 04/23/2004 Page 1 of 36 NOT FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY Civ. No. 02-4561 (WGB) IN RE FLEETBOSTON FINANCIAL CORPORATION SECURITIES LITIGATION O P I N I O N APPEARANCES: Gary S. Graifman, Esq. Benjamin Benson, Esq. KANTROWITZ, GOLDHAMER & GRAIFMAN 210 Summit Avenue Montvale, New Jersey 07645 Liaison Counsel for Plaintiffs Samuel H. Rudman, Esq. CAULEY GELLER BOWMAN & COATES, LLP 200 Broadhollow Road, Suite 406 Melville, NY 11747 Co-Lead Counsel for Plaintiffs Joseph H. Weiss, Esq. WEISS & YOURMAN 551 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1600 New York, New York 10176 Co-Lead Counsel for Plaintiffs Jules Brody, Esq. Howard T. Longman, Esq. STULL, STULL & BRODY 6 East 45 th Street New York, New York 10017 Co-Lead Counsel for Plaintiffs 1 Case 2:02-cv-04561-GEB-MCA Document 28 Filed 04/23/2004 Page 2 of 36 David M. Meisels, Esq. HERRICK, FEINSTEIN LLP 2 Penn Plaza Newark, NJ 07105-2245 Mitchell Lowenthal, Esq. Jeffrey Rosenthal, Esq. CLEARY, GOTTLIEB, STEEN & HAMILTON One Liberty Plaza New York, NY 10006 Attorneys for Defendants BASSLER, DISTRICT JUDGE: This is a putative securities class action brought on behalf of all persons or entities except Defendants, who exchanged shares of Summit Bancorp (“Summit”) common stock for shares of FleetBoston Financial Corporation (“FBF”) common stock in connection with the merger between FBF and Summit. Defendants FBF and the individual Defendants 1 (collectively “Defendants”) move to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Consolidated Amended Complaint (“the Amended Complaint”) pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 12(b)(6).
    [Show full text]
  • The Technology Behind Crusoe™ Processors
    The Technology Behind Crusoe™ Processors Low-power x86-Compatible Processors Implemented with Code Morphing™ Software Alexander Klaiber Transmeta Corporation January 2000 The Technology Behind Crusoe™ Processors Property of: Transmeta Corporation 3940 Freedom Circle Santa Clara, CA 95054 USA (408) 919-3000 http://www.transmeta.com The information contained in this document is provided solely for use in connection with Transmeta products, and Transmeta reserves all rights in and to such information and the products discussed herein. This document should not be construed as transferring or granting a license to any intellectual property rights, whether express, implied, arising through estoppel or otherwise. Except as may be agreed in writing by Transmeta, all Transmeta products are provided “as is” and without a warranty of any kind, and Transmeta hereby disclaims all warranties, express or implied, relating to Transmeta’s products, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and non-infringement of third party intellectual property. Transmeta products may contain design defects or errors which may cause the products to deviate from published specifications, and Transmeta documents may contain inaccurate information. Transmeta makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained in this document, and Transmeta reserves the right to change product descriptions and product specifications at any time, without notice. Transmeta products have not been designed, tested, or manufactured for use in any application where failure, malfunction, or inaccuracy carries a risk of death, bodily injury, or damage to tangible property, including, but not limited to, use in factory control systems, medical devices or facilities, nuclear facilities, aircraft, watercraft or automobile navigation or communication, emergency systems, or other applications with a similar degree of potential hazard.
    [Show full text]
  • TRANSMETA BREAKS X86 LOW-POWER BARRIER VLIW Chips Use Hardware-Assisted X86 Emulation by Tom R
    MICROPROCESSOR www.MPRonline.com THE REPORTINSIDER’S GUIDE TO MICROPROCESSOR HARDWARE TRANSMETA BREAKS X86 LOW-POWER BARRIER VLIW Chips Use Hardware-Assisted x86 Emulation By Tom R. Halfhill {2/14/00-01} Like moths drawn to a flame, semiconductor startups seem to find the bright but dangerous glow of the x86 market irresistible. Never mind that companies as resourceful as AMD, Cen- taur, Cyrix, IBM, National Semiconductor, and Rise have all charred their wings in the fires of competition with Intel. More than 120 million x86 chips were with a software envelope that translates x86 binaries into sold in the profitable PC market last year, casting off a warmth native code at run time. that lures newly hatched companies from the darkness. While some companies have used the term “emula- The latest newcomer to emerge from its cocoon is tion” to describe the binary-translation process, Transmeta Transmeta. After nearly five years of unprecedented secrecy, founder Dave Ditzel shuns that term, preferring to describe the Santa Clara–based startup finally unveiled its pair of his company’s method of converting x86 instructions into x86-compatible Crusoe processors at a widely covered VLIW instructions as “code morphing” or simply “transla- media event near Silicon Valley last month. The event tion.” Sometimes this process is called dynamic binary received the same sort of overhyped coverage the U.S. Air recompilation. Transmeta’s code-morphing software cer- Force might attract by flinging open the gates to Area 51. A tainly is more advanced than old-fashioned emulators, large crowd of mainstream and business journalists were which slowly convert one type of binary executable into dazzled by marketing claims about “revolutionary” micro- another by translating one instruction at a time.
    [Show full text]
  • Participant Bios Forum 2018 Revised
    Indiaspora Leadership Forum 2018 Thinkers, Doers, Givers Bios Meenakshi Abbi joined RPA’s San Francisco office in May 2012 as a member of the Sponsored Projects & Funds team. She manages a portfolio of projects and donor collaboratives focused on a range of issues including education, diversity, improving philanthropy, impact investing, and other issues. Prior to her current role at RPA, Meenakshi worked at Tides for over four years as a program manager for fiscally sponsored 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) projects, and helped re-launch Tides Advocacy Fund. She was also Director of the Small Business Development Center Technology Advisory Program, a nonprofit dedicated to helping small businesses effectively utilize technology. Meenakshi holds a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science. Her passions include civic engagement, financial inclusion, and social justice. She is on the advisory board of Fund the People, Justice Strategies and is the co-chair of Asian American Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy San Francisco’s Steering Committee. Qamar Adamjee, Malavalli Family Foundation Associate Curator of Art of the Indian Subcontinent at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, joined the museum in 2009. She received her PhD and MA in art history from New York University and an MBA in marketing from the Institute of Business Administration, Karachi (Pakistan). Before coming to the Asian, Adamjee worked in the Islamic department at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Adamjee’s key interests lie in the intersections of art and culture and in connections between the past and our present. A specialist in Indian and Persian paintings, she has written, lectured, and organized exhibitions on subjects as diverse as Islamic art, Hindu and Sikh art, 19th-century photography, painting, and prints, Indian paintings, sculpture, and contemporary art.
    [Show full text]
  • Vertigo: Automatic Performance-Setting for Linux
    USENIX Association Proceedings of the 5th Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation Boston, Massachusetts, USA December 9–11, 2002 THE ADVANCED COMPUTING SYSTEMS ASSOCIATION © 2002 by The USENIX Association All Rights Reserved For more information about the USENIX Association: Phone: 1 510 528 8649 FAX: 1 510 548 5738 Email: [email protected] WWW: http://www.usenix.org Rights to individual papers remain with the author or the author's employer. Permission is granted for noncommercial reproduction of the work for educational or research purposes. This copyright notice must be included in the reproduced paper. USENIX acknowledges all trademarks herein. Vertigo: Automatic Performance-Setting for Linux Krisztián Flautner Trevor Mudge [email protected] [email protected] ARM Limited The University of Michigan 110 Fulbourn Road 1301 Beal Avenue Cambridge, UK CB1 9NJ Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2122 Abstract player, game machine, camera, GPS, even the wallet— into a single device. This requires processors that are Combining high performance with low power con- capable of high performance and modest power con- sumption is becoming one of the primary objectives of sumption. Moreover, to be power efficient, the proces- processor designs. Instead of relying just on sleep mode sors for the next generation communicator need to take for conserving power, an increasing number of proces- advantage of the highly variable performance require- sors take advantage of the fact that reducing the clock ments of the applications they are likely to run. For frequency and corresponding operating voltage of the example an MPEG video player requires about an order CPU can yield quadratic decrease in energy use.
    [Show full text]
  • 09-35262.Pdf
    FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES (USA) LLC; JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., a Delaware corporation, successor in interest to Hambrecht & Quist and Chase Securities Inc.; BANK OF No. 09-35262 AMERICA CORPORATION, a Delaware D.C. No. 2:07-cv- corporation, successor in interest 01549-JLR to Fleetboston Robertson Stephens, Inc.; ONVIA INC., a Delaware corporation formerly known as Onvia.com Inc.; ROBERTSON STEPHENS, INC.; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION 821 822 SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES INC.; FOUNDRY NETWORKS INC., Nominal No. 09-35280 Defendant, a Delaware D.C. Nos. corporation; MERRILL LYNCH 2:07-cv-01566-JLR PIERCE FENNER & SMITH 2:07-cv-01549-JLR INCORPORATED; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MERRILL LYNCH & CO. INC., Defendant, and No. 09-35282 D.C. Nos. FINISAR CORPORATION, Nominal Defendant, a Delaware 2:07-cv-01567-JLR 2:07-cv-01549-JLR corporation; MERRILL LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH INCORPORATED; J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES INC., Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION SIMMONDS v. CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES 823 VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MORGAN STANLEY & CO., No. 09-35285 INCORPORATED; LEHMAN BROTHERS, D.C. Nos. INC.; BANK OF AMERICA 2:07-cv-01568-JLR CORPORATION; ROBERTSON 2:07-cv-01549-JLR STEPHENS, INC.; AVANEX CORPORATION, Defendants-Appellees. In Re: SECTION 16(b) LITIGATION VANESSA SIMMONDS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CREDIT SUISSE GROUP, a global bank headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland formerly known as Credit Suisse First Boston No.
    [Show full text]
  • The First International Conference on Mobile Systems, Applications, and Services
    USENIX Association Proceedings of MobiSys 2003: The First International Conference on Mobile Systems, Applications, and Services San Francisco, CA, USA May 5-8, 2003 © 2003 by The USENIX Association All Rights Reserved For more information about the USENIX Association: Phone: 1 510 528 8649 FAX: 1 510 548 5738 Email: [email protected] WWW: http://www.usenix.org Rights to individual papers remain with the author or the author's employer. Permission is granted for noncommercial reproduction of the work for educational or research purposes. This copyright notice must be included in the reproduced paper. USENIX acknowledges all trademarks herein. Operating System Modifications for Task-Based Speed and Voltage Scheduling Jacob R. Lorch Alan Jay Smith Microsoft Research University of California, Berkeley 1 Microsoft Way EECS Department, Computer Science Division Redmond, WA 98052 Berkeley, CA 94720-1776 [email protected] [email protected] Abstract lower voltages mean lower energy consumption. Lower voltages, however, necessitate lower CPU speeds, pre- This paper describes RightSpeed, a task-based speed senting an interesting operating system issue: how to en- and voltage scheduler for Windows 2000. It takes ad- sure that performance remains reasonable while some- vantage of the ability of certain processors, such as those times lowering speed to save energy. from Transmeta and AMD, to dynamically change speed Traditionally, systems use interval-based strategies. and voltage and thus to save energy while running more Such strategies divide time into intervals of fixed length slowly. RightSpeed uses PACE, an algorithm that com- and set the speed for each interval based on recent CPU putes the most energy efficient way to meet task dead- utilization.
    [Show full text]
  • Introducing the 2010 Venture Capital
    Zynga Investor Sandy Miller: IPO Pricing More Art Than Science LinkedIn Inc. melted the tech IPO market deep freeze A. It’s more art right now. We’re very early in this new when it debuted last month, warming the way for other robust IPO market. As we move into more of a cycle the high-growth consumer Internet companies in efficiency of pricing improves because there are more registration such as daily deals site Groupon Inc., music comparables. streaming service Pandora Inc. and online vacation- rentals company HomeAway Inc. Now, social gaming Q. Any thoughts on the pricing of LinkedIn, Groupon companies Zynga Inc. and PopCap Games Inc. are or others now coming out of the gate? planning their entries to the public markets. A. Companies are always priced as compared to public Institutional Venture Partners comparables, presumably at some discount. The General Partner Sandy Miller, market loves growth and that’s why these companies an investor in Zynga, was are getting premium valuations. The bulk of tech mum on the FarmVille portfolios today (for major mutual funds) are in big cap creator’s plans, but he did companies that are no longer growth companies. speak with Venture Capital Microsoft would be the extreme example of what was Dispatch about his thoughts once a great growth company is no longer a fast on the IPO market heating grower. up. Q. So there’s pent up demand growth companies from investors? Having opened the San Francisco office for Merrill A. Yes. It creates differentiation in the technology fund Sandy Miller Lynch and Donaldson, Lufkin if they have a meaningful position in a tech IPO.
    [Show full text]
  • Vol 1-No 2 0801.Qxd
    Antitrust Review Published by the Antitrust and Trade Regulation Practice Group Volume 2, No. 5 May 2004 We are proud to annouce that Robert W. Doyle, Jr. has been nominated to the DC Bar’s Antitrust and Consumer Law Steering Committee. Voting ends on June 4th. In This Issue OUT OF THE ROUGH: PGA “SCORES” ANTITRUST VICTORY An exhibitor of professional golf tournaments successfully defended • Out Of The Rough: PGA “Scores” Antitrust Victory its conduct in refusing to allow a media company to have access to real-time player scores from the PGA's tournaments unless the • Fashion Models Charge company agreed not to sell the information to Internet sites that Price-Fixing: “Ha! Ha! Ha!” compete with the PGA's Internet site. In a decision issued March 31, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals held that even if the PGA has a • JFTC On Raid Patrol monopoly over the real-time reporting of golf tournament scores, the exhibitor's desire to discourage "free riders" from posting the scores • Gaming Corp. v. Black Hawk Casino Owners on their Internet sites without paying for such information constituted Association: All Roads a lawful "business justification" for PGA's refusal to deal with media Lead To Black Hawk that would not agree to restrict access to the information. Morris Communications Corp. v. PGA Tour, Inc., 2004 WL 627723 (March • District Court Rejects Per 31, 2004). The decision provides an example of where a presumed Se Price-Fixing Analysis monopolist is permitted to engage in a refusal to deal its monopoly For Borders/Amazon products or services in order to protect its economic investment in Websites creating the monopoly.
    [Show full text]