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Using a locally produced microprocessor based on the design of the Intel 4004. First built in 1972, a small number shipped in early 1973. [17] [18] Micral N: Intel 8008 [19] 1973: Awarded the title of "the first personal computer using a microprocessor" by a panel at the Computer History Museum in 1986. [20] Q1 Corp. Q1/Lite Intel 8080: 1974
Texas Instruments TMS320; Texas Instruments TMS1000 – used in the TI-35, Big Trak, and Speak & Spell; Texas Instruments TMS1100 – used in the Microvision; Texas Instruments TMS3556 – a graphics chip used in the EXL 100 [citation needed]
The Intel MCS-51 (commonly termed 8051) is a single-chip microcontroller (MCU) series developed by Intel in 1980 for use in embedded systems.The architect of the Intel MCS-51 instruction set was John H. Wharton.
On the release of the Micro 440, Byte magazine wrote that it was the first third-party computer based on Intel's 4040 microprocessor. [5] [a] Although its initial price was only $275—or $100 less than the Altair 8800—the Micro 440 sold poorly, although it became somewhat popular at universities. Crenshaw surmised that the company had ...
ESP32 is a series of low-cost, low-power system-on-chip microcontrollers with integrated Wi-Fi and dual-mode Bluetooth.The ESP32 series employs either a Tensilica Xtensa LX6 microprocessor in both dual-core and single-core variations, an Xtensa LX7 dual-core microprocessor, or a single-core RISC-V microprocessor and includes built-in antenna switches, RF balun, power amplifier, low-noise ...
List of AMD Athlon X2 processors; List of AMD Athlon XP processors; List of AMD chipsets; List of AMD CPU microarchitectures; List of AMD Duron processors; List of AMD FX processors; List of AMD graphics processing units; List of AMD K5 processors; List of AMD K6 processors; List of AMD Opteron processors; List of AMD mobile processors; List of ...
The NEC μCOM series is a series of microprocessors and microcontrollers manufactured by NEC in the 1970s and 1980s. The initial entries in the series were custom-designed 4 and 16-bit designs, but later models in the series were mostly based on the Intel 8080 and Zilog Z80 8-bit designs, and later, the Intel 8086 16-bit design.
The Am29000 family are 32-bit RISC microprocessors. The Am29000 was a Berkeley RISC, register window design similar to the Sun SPARC. Am29000 32-bit RISC microprocessor, 4-stage Pipeline, 512-byte BTC (branch target cache) Am29005 32-bit RISC microprocessor with neither (functional) MMU nor BTC; Am29027 Floating-point unit co-processor chip