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  2. Motorola MC14500B - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_MC14500B

    One of the computers known to be based on this processor is the educational WDR 1-bit computer (512 bits of RAM, LED, I/O, keyboard). [4] A modern take, in retro style, of a computer based on this processor is the PLC14500-Nano. It is certified as Open Source Hardware PL000011 so anyone can learn from its design and can freely build it.

  3. 1-bit computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-bit_computing

    A serial computer processes data a single bit at a time. For example, the PDP-8/S was a 12-bit computer using a 1-bit ALU, processing the 12 bits serially. [2]An example of a 1-bit computer built from discrete logic SSI chips is the Wang 500 (1970/1971) calculator [3] [4] as well as the Wang 1200 (1971/1972) [5] word processor series developed by Wang Laboratories.

  4. Ricoh 2A03 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricoh_2A03

    The Ricoh 2A03's sound hardware has 5 channels, separated into two APUs (Audio Processing Units). The first APU contains two general purpose pulse channels with 4 duty cycles, and the second APU contains a triangle wave generator, an LFSR-based Noise generator, and a 1-bit Delta modulation-encoded PCM (DPCM) channel. While a majority of the NES ...

  5. Audison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audison

    Audison is one of the brands of the Italian company Elettromedia s.r.l., a manufacturer of car audio products. The company was founded in 1979, but Audison name (born from Latin words Audio and Sonus) was registered in 1984. Currently Audison has different kinds of mobile audio products: amplifiers, audio processors, speakers and subwoofers.

  6. Minimal instruction set computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimal_instruction_set...

    Separate from the stack definition of a MISC architecture, is the MISC architecture being defined by the number of instructions supported. Typically a minimal instruction set computer is viewed as having 32 or fewer instructions, [1] [2] [3] where NOP, RESET, and CPUID type instructions are usually not counted by consensus due to their fundamental nature.

  7. Control register - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_register

    The early CPU lacked dedicated control registers, and relied on a limited set of internal signals and flags. [1] When IBM developed a paging version [note 1] of the System/360, they added 16 control registers [2] [3] to the design for what became the 360/67.

  8. How an AI granny is combating phone scams - AOL

    www.aol.com/ai-granny-combating-phone-scams...

    British mobile phone company O2 has unveiled an “AI granny” called Daisy who is helping combat fraud by wasting scammers’ time with long phone calls.

  9. Reset vector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reset_vector

    The reset vector for 6502 processor family is a 16-bit address stored at 0xFFFC and 0xFFFD. The reset vector for 6800 and 6809 processor families is a 16-bit address stored at 0xFFFE and 0xFFFF. No Reset Vector. For 8051 / 8080 / 8085 / Z80, reset starts code execution at address 0x0000.