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PowerPC 600. The PowerPC 600 family was the first family of PowerPC processors built. They were designed at the Somerset facility in Austin, Texas, jointly funded and staffed by engineers from IBM and Motorola as a part of the AIM alliance. Somerset was opened in 1992 and its goal was to make the first PowerPC processor and then keep designing ...
Apple UniNorth 2 AGP used in PowerPC 74xx Based Macs. Apple used their own type of northbridges which were custom ASICs manufactured by VLSI(later Philips),Texas Instruments and Lucent (later agere systems) List of Northbridge for PowerPC: IBM: CPC 700 and CPC 710 for IBM PowerPC 750 series. CPC 925 and CPC 945 for IBM PowerPC 970 series.
PowerPC (with the backronym Performance Optimization With Enhanced RISC – Performance Computing, sometimes abbreviated as PPC) is a reduced instruction set computer (RISC) instruction set architecture (ISA) created by the 1991 Apple – IBM – Motorola alliance, known as AIM. PowerPC, as an evolving instruction set, has been named Power ISA ...
v. t. e. The PowerPC e600 is a family of 32-bit PowerPC microprocessor cores developed by Freescale for primary use in high performance system-on-a-chip (SoC) designs with speed ranging over 2 GHz, thus making them ideal for high performance routing and telecommunications applications. The e600 is the continuation of the PowerPC 74xx design.
The PowerPC 7400 (code-named "Max") debuted in August 1999 and was the first processor to carry the "G4" moniker. The chip operates at speeds ranging from 350 to 500 MHz and contains 10.5 million transistors, manufactured using Motorola's 0.20 μm HiPerMOS6 process.
PowerPC 1.1 64 bits 1 0.25 μm Cu 23 M 170 mm 2: 32 KB I 64 KB D 1–16 MB external n/a 333–450 MHz 1088 pin CLGA 1999 POWER4: PowerPC 2.00 PowerPC-AS 64 bits 2 180 nm 174 M 412 mm 2: 64 KB I 32 KB D per core 1.41 MB per core 32 MB external 1–1.3 GHz 1024 pin CLGA ceramic MCM 2001 POWER4+ PowerPC 2.01 PowerPC-AS 64 bits 2 130 nm 184 M 267 mm 2
The PowerPC ThinkPad line was considerably more expensive than the standard x86 ThinkPads — even a modestly configured 850 cost upwards of $12,000. [4] On the other hand, the 800, 850 and 851 (and later the 860 and 861) were capable of supporting an optional web camera, one of the first commercially available webcams available on a laptop. [ 5 ]
Download QR code; Wikidata item; Print/export Download as PDF; ... PowerPC 600; PowerPC 970; PowerPC 5000; B. Broadway (processor) C. Cell (processor) Communications ...