List of microprocessors

This is a list of microprocessors.[1]

Altera

  • Nios 16-bit (soft processor)
  • Nios II 32-bit (soft processor)

AMD

Apollo

  • PRISM

ARM

  • ARM

Atmel

AT&T

Bell Labs

BLX IC Design Corporation

Broadcom

  • XLS 200 series multicore processor

Centaur Technology/IDT

Computer Cowboys

  • Sh-Boom

Cyrix

Data General

Centre for Development of Advanced Computing

Digital Equipment Corporation

DM&P Electronics

Emotion Engine by Sony & Toshiba

Elbrus

Electronic Arrays

EnSilica

Fairchild Semiconductor

Freescale Semiconductor (formerly Motorola)

Fujitsu

Garrett AiResearch/American Microsystems

Google

Harris Semiconductor

Hewlett-Packard

Hitachi

Inmos

IBM

POWER

PowerPC-AS

  • 1995 – A10
  • 1996 – A25 and A30
  • 1997 – RS64
  • 1998 – RS64-II
  • 1999 – RS64-III
  • 2000 – RS64-IV

z/Architecture

  • 2008 – IBM z10
  • 2010 – IBM z196
  • 2012 – IBM zEC12
  • 2015 – IBM z13
  • 2017 – IBM z14
  • 2019 – IBM z15
  • 2021 – IBM Telum

IIT-M

Intel

Intersil

ISRO

Lattice Semiconductor

MIPS Technologies

MOS Technology

National Semiconductor

NCR

NEC

Novix

  • NC4016 (originally called the NC4000)

NVIDIA

NXP (formerly Philips Semiconductors)

OpenCores

Oracle Corporation (formerly Sun Microsystems)

Panafacom

  • PANAFACOM-16A (originally MN1610)

Plessey Microsystems

  • MIPROC 16

RCA

Renesas Electronics

RISC-V Foundation

Rise Technology

Sunway

  • SW-1 / SW-2 / SW-3 / SW1600 / SW26010

STMicroelectronics

Tesla

Texas Instruments

Toshiba

  • Cell
  • Toshiba TLCS microcontrollers: TLCS-12,[5] TLCS-48, TLCS-Z80, TLCS-90, TLCS-870, TLCS-900

Transmeta

VIA

Western Design Center

Western Digital

Western Electric

Xilinx

Zilog

See also

References

  1. ^ Bowen, Jonathan P. (July–August 1985). "Standard Microprocessor Programming Cards". Microprocessors and Microsystems. 9 (6): 274–290. doi:10.1016/0141-9331(85)90116-4.
  2. ^ "The F-14 "Tomcat" First Microprocessor". firstmicroprocessor.com. 2017-10-20.
  3. ^ "PSLV-C17/Gsat-12 - Isro".
  4. ^ Subramanian, T. s. (15 July 2011). "ISRO-developed computer helped PSLV-C17 put satellite in orbit". The Hindu.
  5. ^ 1970年代 マイコンの開発と発展 ~集積回路, Semiconductor History Museum of Japan

External links

  • Microprocessor/Co-processor/Microcontroller families
  • Programming Textfiles: Bowen's Instruction Summary Cards