This is a list of microprocessors.[1]
Altera
edit- Nios 16-bit (soft processor)
- Nios II 32-bit (soft processor)
AMD
edit- List of AMD K5 processors
- List of AMD Athlon processors
- List of AMD Athlon 64 processors
- List of AMD Athlon XP processors
- List of AMD Duron processors
- List of AMD Opteron processors
- List of AMD Sempron processors
- List of AMD Turion processors
- List of AMD Athlon X2 processors
- List of AMD Phenom processors
- List of AMD FX processors
- List of AMD Ryzen processors
Apollo
editARM
editAtmel
editAT&T
editBell Labs
editBLX IC Design Corporation
editBroadcom
edit- XLS 200 series multicore processor
Centaur Technology/IDT
editComputer Cowboys
edit- Sh-Boom
Cyrix
editData General
edit- microNOVA mN601 and mN602
- microECLIPSE
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing
editDigital Equipment Corporation
editDM&P Electronics
editEmotion Engine by Sony & Toshiba
editElbrus
editElectronic Arrays
editEnSilica
editFairchild Semiconductor
editFreescale Semiconductor (formerly Motorola)
editFujitsu
editGarrett AiResearch/American Microsystems
editHarris Semiconductor
editHewlett-Packard
editHitachi
edit- SuperH SH-1/SH-2 etc.
Inmos
edit- Transputer T2/T4/T8
IBM
edit- 1977 – OPD Mini Processor
- 1986 – IBM ROMP
- 2000 – Gekko processor
- 2005 – Xenon processor
- 2006 – Cell processor
- 2006 – Broadway processor
- 2012 – Espresso processor
- 2016 – IBM Q processors
POWER
edit- 1990 – POWER1
- 1992 – RISC Single Chip
- 1993 – POWER2
- 1996 – P2SC
- 1998 – POWER3
- 2001 – POWER4
- 2004 – POWER5
- 2007 – POWER6
- 2010 – POWER7
- 2013 – POWER8
- 2017 – POWER9
- 2020 – Power10
PowerPC-AS
edit- 1995 – A10
- 1996 – A25 and A30
- 1997 – RS64
- 1998 – RS64-II
- 1999 – RS64-III
- 2000 – RS64-IV
z/Architecture
editIIT-M
editIntel
editIntersil
editISRO
editLattice Semiconductor
edit- LatticeMico8 8-bit (soft processor)
- LatticeMico32 32-bit (soft processor)
MIPS Technologies
editMOS Technology
editNational Semiconductor
editNCR
editNEC
editNovix
edit- NC4016 (originally called the NC4000)
NVIDIA
editNXP (formerly Philips Semiconductors)
editOpenCores
editOracle Corporation (formerly Sun Microsystems)
editPanafacom
edit- PANAFACOM-16A (originally MN1610)
Plessey Microsystems
edit- MIPROC 16
RCA
editRenesas Electronics
editRISC-V Foundation
editRise Technology
editSunway
editSTMicroelectronics
edit- STM32 series
Tesla
editTexas Instruments
edit- Texas Instruments TMS320
- Texas Instruments TMS1000 – used in the TI-35, Big Trak, and Speak & Spell
- Texas Instruments TMS1100 – used in the Microvision
- Texas Instruments TMS3556 – a graphics chip used in the EXL 100[citation needed]
- Texas Instruments TMS7000
- Texas Instruments TMS7020 – used in the EXL 100
- Texas Instruments TMS9900
Toshiba
edit- Cell
- Toshiba TLCS microcontrollers: TLCS-12,[5] TLCS-48, TLCS-Z80, TLCS-90, TLCS-870, TLCS-900
Transmeta
editVIA
editWestern Design Center
edit- 65C02 (8-bit)
- 65816/65802 (16-bit)
Western Digital
editWestern Electric
edit- WE-32000 (Rebranded Bellmac 32, used in the 3B series computers)
Xilinx
edit- PicoBlaze 8-bit (soft processor)
- MicroBlaze 32-bit (soft processor)
Zilog
edit- Zilog
- Z80 architecture
- Zilog Z800
- Zilog Z8000
- Zilog Z80000
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ 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.
- ^ "The F-14 "Tomcat" First Microprocessor". firstmicroprocessor.com. 2017-10-20.
- ^ "PSLV-C17/Gsat-12 - Isro".
- ^ Subramanian, T. s. (15 July 2011). "ISRO-developed computer helped PSLV-C17 put satellite in orbit". The Hindu.
- ^ 1970年代 マイコンの開発と発展 ~集積回路, Semiconductor History Museum of Japan