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2007-03-14 06:19:17 · 11 answers · asked by Gautham 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

11 answers

Intel 4004 is the first processor.

2007-03-14 06:28:24 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1971 Intel develops the the first processor, the 4004
Developed by Intel in 1971, the 4004 was the first processor with a 4-bit register and a clock speed of 1MHz.

2007-03-14 13:24:04 · answer #2 · answered by 7S282 4 · 1 0

Intel 4004 was the first processor

2007-03-15 00:28:28 · answer #3 · answered by Shemit 6 · 0 0

4004, followed by 8008 and 8080

"Originally developed for the Japanese company Busicom to replace a number of ASICs in a calculator already produced by Busicom, the Intel 4004 was introduced to the mass market on November 15, 1971, though the microprocessor did not become the core of Intel's business until the mid-1980s."

2007-03-14 13:29:55 · answer #4 · answered by maverick_youth 4 · 1 0

If you mean a microprocessor of the well defined architecture it is 4004.

If it is some other Digital processor it is something else. They created Adders/Multipliers etc (strictly speaking these also are in the processor domain)

2007-03-14 13:35:10 · answer #5 · answered by surnell 4 · 1 0

4004 Microprocessor was first intel processor made in 1971

2007-03-14 13:32:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

4004 Microprocessor was first intel processor made in 1971

2007-03-14 13:25:44 · answer #7 · answered by ucoaroonz 1 · 0 0

INTEL 4004 - Microprocessor introduced in 1970 with the speed of 108KHz was the worlds first microprocessor.

2007-03-14 13:24:50 · answer #8 · answered by Smile- conquers the world 6 · 0 0

This is the first Intel Processor!!!

Intel 4004: first single-chip microprocessor
Introduced November 15-16, 1971
Clock speed 740 kHz
0.06 MIPS
Bus Width 4 bits (multiplexed address/data due to limited pins)
PMOS
Number of Transistors 2,300 at 10 µm
Addressable Memory 640 bytes
Program Memory 4 KiB
One of the earliest Commercial Microprocessors (cf. Four Phase Systems AL1, F14 CADC)
Originally designed to be used in Busicom calculator
Trivia: The original goal was to equal the clock speed of the IBM 1620 (1 MHz); this was not quite met.


after that....


1.1 Intel 4004: first single-chip microprocessor
1.2 4040
2 The 8-bit processors
2.1 8008
2.2 8080
2.3 8085
3 The bit-slice processor
3.1 3000 Family
4 The 16-bit processors: origin of x86
4.1 8086
4.2 8088
4.3 80186
4.4 80188
4.5 80286
5 32-bit processors: the non-x86 microprocessors
5.1 iAPX 432
5.2 i960 aka 80960
5.3 i860 aka 80860
5.4 XScale
6 32-bit processors: the 80386 range
6.1 80386DX
6.2 80386SX
6.3 80376
6.4 80386SL
6.5 80386EX
7 32-bit processors: the 80486 range
7.1 80486DX
7.2 80486SX
7.3 80486DX2
7.4 80486SL
7.5 80486DX4
8 32-bit processors: the Pentium ("I")
8.1 Pentium ("Classic")
8.2 Pentium MMX
9 32-bit processors: P6/Pentium M microarchitecture
9.1 Pentium Pro
9.2 Pentium II
9.3 Celeron (Pentium II-based)
9.4 Pentium III
9.5 Pentium II and III Xeon
9.6 Celeron (Pentium III Coppermine-based)
9.7 Celeron (Pentium III Tualatin-based)
9.8 Pentium M
9.9 Celeron M
9.10 Intel Core
9.11 Dual-Core Xeon LV
10 32-bit processors: NetBurst microarchitecture
10.1 Pentium 4
10.2 Xeon
10.3 Mobile Pentium 4-M
10.4 Pentium 4 EE
10.5 Pentium 4E
10.6 Pentium 4F
11 64-bit processors: IA-64
11.1 Itanium
11.2 Itanium 2
12 64-bit processors: EM64T - NetBurst
12.1 Pentium 4F, D0 and later steppings
12.2 Pentium D
12.3 Pentium Extreme Edition
12.4 Xeon
13 64-bit processors: EM64T - Intel Core microarchitecture
13.1 Xeon
13.2 Intel Core 2

2007-03-14 13:35:43 · answer #9 · answered by mindreader 2 · 1 0

the 4004 in the 70's

2007-03-14 13:30:11 · answer #10 · answered by bsmith13421 6 · 0 0

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