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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Capricorn (microprocessor) FOCUS 32-bit stack architecture; PA-7000 PA-RISC Version 1.0 (32-bit)
Using a locally produced microprocessor based on the design of the Intel 4004. First built in 1972, a small number shipped in early 1973. [22] [23] Micral N: Intel 8008 [24] 1973: Awarded the title of "the first personal computer using a microprocessor" by a panel at the Computer History Museum in 1986. [25] Seiko 7000 Intel 8080: 1974
Clockless processor, as ARM966E-S No caches, TCMs, MPU ARM10E ARMv5TE ARM1020E 6-stage pipeline, Thumb, enhanced DSP instructions, (VFP) 32 KB / 32 KB, MMU ARM1022E As ARM1020E 16 KB / 16 KB, MMU ARMv5TEJ ARM1026EJ-S Thumb, Jazelle DBX, enhanced DSP instructions, (VFP) Variable, MMU or MPU ARM11: ARMv6 ARM1136J(F)-S
Processor Series nomenclature Code name Production date Features supported (instruction set) Clock rate Socket Fabri-cation TDP Cores (number) Bus speed Cache L1 Cache L2 Cache L3 Overclock capable 4004: N/A N/A 1971 - Nov 15 [clarification needed] N/A 740 kHz DIP 10-micron 2 N/A N/A N/A 8008: N/A N/A 1972 - April good [clarification needed] N ...
Microarchitecture Year Pipeline stages Misc Elbrus-8S: 2014 VLIW, Elbrus (proprietary, closed) version 5, 64-bit : AMD K5: 1996 5 Superscalar, branch prediction, speculative execution, out-of-order execution, register renaming [a]
32-bit MIPS-M4K PIC32MX processor boards (40-80 MHz). The Arduino libraries have been implemented natively for the PIC32MX and these kits run in a fork of the standard Arduino IDE, MPIDE [228] and are compatible to most shields. [229] [230] [231] Microchip chipKIT Wi-Fire Digilent [227] PIC32MZ: 200 MHz USB: 32-bit MIPS-M4K PIC32MZ processor ...
The Signetics 2650 was an 8-bit microprocessor introduced in July 1975. [1] According to Adam Osborne's book An Introduction to Microprocessors Vol 2: Some Real Products, it was "the most minicomputer-like" of the microprocessors available at the time.
The OS-9 family was popular for general-purpose computing and remains in use in commercial embedded systems and amongst hobbyists. Today, OS-9 is a product name used by both a Motorola 68000-series machine language OS and a portable (PowerPC, x86, ARM, MIPS, SH4, etc.) version written in C, originally known as OS-9000.