Microprocessor
  Microprocessor Progression: Intel
 

Microprocessor Progression: Intel

Intel 8080
The Intel 8080 was the first microprocessor in a home computer. See more microprocessor pictures.

The first microprocessor to make it into a home computer was the Intel 8080, a complete 8-bit computer on one chip, introduced in 1974. The first microprocessor to make a real splash in the market was the Intel 8088, introduced in 1979 and incorporated into the IBM PC (which first appeared around 1982). If you are familiar with the PC market and its history, you know that the PC market moved from the 8088 to the 80286 to the 80386 to the 80486 to the Pentium to the Pentium II to the Pentium III to the Pentium 4. All of these microprocessors are made by Intel and all of them are improvements on the basic design of the 8088. The Pentium 4 can execute any piece of code that ran on the original 8088, but it does it about 5,000 times faster!

The following table helps you to understand the differences between the different processors that Intel has introduced over the years.

 

Name
Date
Transistors
Microns
Clock speed
Data width
MIPS
8080
1974
6,000
6
2 MHz
8 bits
0.64
8088
1979
29,000
3
5 MHz
16 bits
8-bit bus
0.33
80286
1982
134,000
1.5
6 MHz
16 bits
1
80386
1985
275,000
1.5
16 MHz
32 bits
5
80486
1989
1,200,000
1
25 MHz
32 bits
20
Pentium
1993
3,100,000
0.8
60 MHz
32 bits
64-bit bus
100
Pentium II
1997
7,500,000
0.35
233 MHz
32 bits
64-bit bus
~300
Pentium III
1999
9,500,000
0.25
450 MHz
32 bits
64-bit bus
~510
Pentium 4
2000
42,000,000
0.18
1.5 GHz
32 bits
64-bit bus
~1,700
Pentium 4 "Prescott"
2004
125,000,000
0.09
3.6 GHz
32 bits
64-bit bus
~7,000

Compiled from The Intel Microprocessor Quick Reference Guide and TSCP Benchmark Scores

Information about this table:

    What's a Chip?
    A chip is also called an integrated circuit. Generally it is a small, thin piece of silicon onto which the transistors making up the microprocessor have been etched. A chip might be as large as an inch on a side and can contain tens of millions of transistors. Simpler processors might consist of a few thousand transistors etched onto a chip just a few millimeters square.

     

  • The date is the year that the processor was first introduced. Many processors are re-introduced at higher clock speeds for many years after the original release date.
  • Transistors is the number of transistors on the chip. You can see that the number of transistors on a single chip has risen steadily over the years.
  • Microns is the width, in microns, of the smallest wire on the chip. For comparison, a human hair is 100 microns thick. As the feature size on the chip goes down, the number of transistors rises.
  • Clock speed is the maximum rate that the chip can be clocked at. Clock speed will make more sense in the next section.
  • Data Width is the width of the ALU. An 8-bit ALU can add/subtract/multiply/etc. two 8-bit numbers, while a 32-bit ALU can manipulate 32-bit numbers. An 8-bit ALU would have to execute four instructions to add two 32-bit numbers, while a 32-bit ALU can do it in one instruction. In many cases, the external data bus is the same width as the ALU, but not always. The 8088 had a 16-bit ALU and an 8-bit bus, while the modern Pentiums fetch data 64 bits at a time for their 32-bit ALUs.
  • MIPS stands for "millions of instructions per second" and is a rough measure of the performance of a CPU. Modern CPUs can do so many different things that MIPS ratings lose a lot of their meaning, but you can get a general sense of the relative power of the CPUs from this column.
From this table you can see that, in general, there is a relationship between clock speed and MIPS. The maximum clock speed is a function of the manufacturing process and delays within the chip. There is also a relationship between the number of transistors and MIPS. For example, the 8088 clocked at 5 MHz but only executed at 0.33 MIPS (about one instruction per 15 clock cycles). Modern processors can often execute at a rate of two instructions per clock cycle. That improvement is directly related to the number of transistors on the chip and will make more sense in the next section.
 
  Today, there have been 11 visitors (14 hits) on this page!  
 
This website was created for free with Own-Free-Website.com. Would you also like to have your own website?
Sign up for free