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- Only once in a lifetime will a new invention come about to touch every aspect
- of our lives. Such a device that changes the way we work, live, and play is a special
- one, indeed. The Microprocessor has been around since 1971 years, but in the last few
- years it has changed the American calculators to video games and computers (Givone
- 1). Many microprocessors have been manufactured for all sorts of products; some
- have succeeded and some have not. This paper will discuss the evolution and history
- of the most prominent 16 and 32 bit microprocessors in the microcomputer and how
- they are similar to and different from each other.
- Because microprocessors are a subject that most people cannot relate to and do
- not know much about, this paragraph will introduce some of the terms that will be in-
- volved in the subsequent paragraphs. Throughout the paper the 16-bit and 32-bit mi-
- croprocessors are compared and contrasted. The number 16 in the 16-bit microproces-
- sor refers how many registers there are or how much storage is available for the mi-
- croprocessor (Aumiaux, 3). The microprocessor has a memory address such as A16,
- and at this address the specific commands to the microprocessor are stored in the
- memory of the computer (Aumiaux, 3). So with the 16-bit microprocessor there are
- 576 places to store data. With the 32-bit microprocessor there are twice as many
- places to store data making the microprocessor faster.
- Another common term which is mentioned frequently in the paper is the oscil-
- lator or the time at which the processors ôclockö ticks. The oscillator is the pace
- maker for the microprocessor which tells what frequency the microprocessor can proc-
- ess information, this value is measured in Mega-hertz or MHz. A nanosecond is a
- measurement of time in a processor, or a billionth of a second. This is used to measure
- the time it takes for the computer to execute an instructions, other wise knows as a cy-
- cle.
- There are many different types of companies of which all have their own family
- of processors. Since the individual processors in the families were developed over a
- fairly long period of time, it is hard to distinguish which processors were introduced in
- order. This paper will mention the families of processors in no particular order. The
- first microprocessor that will be discussed is the family of microprocessors called the
- 9900 series manufactured by Texas Instruments during the mid-70s and was developed
- from the architecture of the 900 minicomputer series (Titus, 178). There were five dif-
- ferent actual microprocessors that were designed in this family, they were the
- TMS9900, TMS9980A, TMS9981, TMS9985, and the TMS9940. The TMS9900 was
- the first of these microprocessors so the next four of the microprocessors where simply
- variations of the TMS9900 (Titus, 178). The 9900 series microprocessors runs with
- 64K memory and besides the fact that the 9900 is a 16-bit microprocessor, only 15 of
- the address memory circuits are in use (Titus, 179). The 16th address is used for the
- computer to distinguish between word and data functions (Titus, 179. The 9900 series
- microprocessors runs from 300 nanoseconds to 500 ns from 2MHz to 3.3MHz and
- even some variations of the original microprocessor where made to go up to 4MHz
- (Avtar, 115).
- The next microprocessor that will be discussed is the LSI-11 which was pro-
- duced from the structural plans of the PDP-11 minicomputer family. There are three
- microprocessors in the LSI-11 family they are the LSI-11, LSI-11/2, and the much im-
- proved over the others is the LSI-11/32 (Titus, 131). The big difference between the
- LSI-11 family of microprocessors and other similar microprocessors of its kind is they
- have the instruction codes of a microcomputer but since the LSI-11 microprocessor
- originated from the PDP-11 family it is a multi-microprocessor (Avtar, 207). The fact
- that the LSI-11 microprocessor is a multi-microprocessor means that many other mi-
- croprocessors are used in conjunction with the LSI-11 to function properly (Avtar,
- 207). The LSI-11 microprocessor has a direct processing speed of 16-bit word and 7-
- bit data, however the improved LSI-11/22 can directly process 64-bit data (Titus, 131).
- The average time that the LSI-11 and LSI-11/2 process at are 380 nanoseconds, while
- the LSI-11/23 is clocked at 300 nanoseconds (Titus, 132). There are some great
- strengths that lie in the LSI-11 family, some of which are the efficient way at which
- the microprocessor processes and the ability to run minicomputer software which leads
- to great hardware support (Avtar, 179). Although there are many strengths to the LSI-
- 11 family there are a couple of weaknesses, they have limited memory and the slow-
- ness of speed at which the LSI-11 processes at (Avtar, 179).
- The next major microprocessors in the microcomputing industry were the
- Z8001 and Z8002, however when the microprocessor entered into the market the term
- Z8000 was used to mean either or both of the microprocessors (Titus, 73). So when
- describing the features of both the Z8001 and the Z8002, they will be referred to as the
- Z8000. The microprocessor was designed by the Zilog Corporation and put out on the
- market in 1979 (Titus, 73). The Z8000 are a lot like the many other previous micro-
- processors except for the obvious fact that it is faster and better, but are similar be-
- cause they depend on their registers to function properly (Titus, 73). The Z8000 was
- improved by using 21 16-bit registers, 14 of them are used for general purposes opera-
- tions (Titus, 73). The difference with the Z8001 and the Z8002 is the Z8002 can only
- address 65K bytes of memory, which is fascinating compared to the microprocessors
- earlier in time but is greatly inferior to the Z8001 which can address 8M bytes (8000K)
- of memory (Titus, 73). The addressing memory between the two otherwise very simi-
- lar microprocessors is drastically different were as other functions of the microproces-
- sors seem to be quite the same. An example of this is the cycle time. The cycle time is
- 250 nanoseconds and the average number of cycles that occur per instruction are be-
- tween 10 and 14 for both microprocessors (Avtar, 25).
- The next microprocessor that will be discussed is the 8086. This microproces-
- sor is the best in my opinion, out of all the 16-bit microprocessors. Not only because
- the speeds of processing are tremendous, but because it simply paved the way to the
- 32-bit microprocessors using various techniques that will be discussed later. The 8086
- was the second Intel microprocessor (being preceded by the 8080) (Avtar, 19). The
- 8086 was introduced in early 1978 by Intel (Avtar, 19). Like so many of the other
- processors the 8086 is register oriented with fourteen 16-bit registers, eight of which
- are used for general processing purposes (Avtar, 19). The 8086 can directly address
- 1MB (1,048,576 bytes) which is used only in accessing Read Only Memory. The ba-
- sic clock frequency for the 8086 is between 4MHz and 8MHz depending on the type
- of 8086 microprocessor that is used (Avtar, 20).
- Up until this point in the paper there have been common reoccurring phrase
- such as a microprocessor containing 14 16-bit registers. At this time in the evolution
- of microprocessors come the 32-bit register, which obviously has double the capacity
- to hold information for the microprocessor. Because of this simple increase of the
- register capacity we have a whole different type of microprocessor. Although the 16-
- bit and 32-bit microprocessors are quite different (meaning they have more compo-
- nents and such), the 32-bit microprocessors will be described in the same terms as the
- 16-bit microprocessors were.
- The remainder of the paper will discuss the 32-bit microprocessor series. The
- external data bus is a term that will be referred to in the remainder of the paper is. The
- data bus is basically what brings data from the memory to the processor and from the
- processor to the memory (Givone, 123). The data bus is similar to the registers located
- on the microprocessor but are a little bit slower to access (Givone, 123).
- The first 32-bit microprocessor in the microprocessor industry that will be dis-
- cussed is the series 32000 family and was originally built for main-frame computers.
- In the 32000 family all of the different microprocessors have the same 32-bit internal
- structure; but may have external bus values such as 8, 16, or 32 bits (Mitchell, 225). In
- the 32000 family the microprocessors use only 24 of the potential 32 bit addressing
- space, giving the microprocessor a 16 Mbyte address space (Mitchell, 225). The 32-
- bit registers are set up so there are six 32-bit dedicated registers and then in combina-
- tion there are two 16-bit dedicated registers (Mitchell, 231). Each dedicated register
- has its own type of specific information that it holds for processing (Mitchell, 232).
- The microprocessors oscillator (which now comes from an external source) runs at 2.5
- MHz, but due to a ôdivide-by-four prescalerö the clock frequency runs at 10MHz.
- There have been many new ideas put into practice to improve the 32000 series micro-
- processor generally and thus making it run faster and more efficient.
- The next family of microprocessor which was fabricated for the microcomputer
- is the MC68020 32-bit microprocessor which is based on the MC68000 family. The
- other microprocessors that are included in this family are the MC68000, MC68008,
- MC68010 and the MC68012 (Avtar, 302). Before going into the types of components
- that this microprocessor contains, it should first be know that the making of the
- MC68020 has been the product of 60 man-years of designing including the manufac-
- turing of the High-density Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor giving the mi-
- croprocessor high speed and low resistance and heat loss (Avtar, 302). Because of all
- the work that was put into the MC68020 and its other related microprocessors, it is an
- extremely complex microprocessor. The MC68020 operates in two modes, these are
- the user mode(for application programs) or the supervisor mode (the operating system
- and other special functions) (Mitchell, 155). The user and supervisor modes all have
- there own specific registers to operate their functions. The user programming has 17
- 32-bit address registers, and an 8-bit register (Mitchell, 155). Then the supervisor pro-
- gramming has three 32-bit, an 8-bit and two 3-bit registers for small miscellaneous
- functions (Mitchell, 155). All of these registers within the two modes are split up into
- different groups which would hold different information as usual, but this set up of
- registers gives the microprocessors a 20 32-bit information storing capacity.
- The next family of microprocessor is IntelÆs 80386 and 80486 families. The
- 80386 and 80486 were mostly over all better then the other microprocessors being
- made by the different companies in the industry at this time, simply because Intel is
- now the leading microprocessor producer in todayÆs market. The 80386 was a product
- that evolved from IntelÆs very first microprocessor, the 8-bit 8080 (Mitchell, 85). Then
- next came the earlier mentioned 16-bit 8086. The reason why Intel did so well in the
- market for microprocessors was because every microprocessor that they made was
- compatible with the previous and future (Mitchell, 85). This means that if a piece of
- software worked on the 8080 then it worked on the future microprocessors and vice-a-
- versa. Not only did Intel look forward but they looked back. The main difference
- between the 80386 and the other 32-bit microprocessors is the added feature of a bar-
- rel shifter (Mitchell, 88). The barrel shifter allowed information to switch places mul-
- tiple times in the registers within a single cycle (Mitchell, 88). The microprocessor
- contains 8 general purpose 32-bit registers, but with the barrel shifter that is increased
- to the equivalent of a 64-bit microprocessor. For the most common 20MHz 80386
- microprocessor the run time for each cycle is 59 nanoseconds, but for a 33MHz mi-
- croprocessor the cycle time is reduced to 49 nanoseconds.
- The next 32-bit microprocessor in market are AT&TÆs WE32100 and 32200
- (Mitchell, 5). These microprocessors also needed six peripheral chips in order to run,
- these are termed: Memory Management Units, floating point arithmetic, Maths Accel-
- eration Units, Direct Memory Access Control, and Dynamic Rand Access Memory
- Control (Mitchell, 5). These microprocessors apart from the microprocessors all work
- an important part of processing the data that comes through the microprocessor. The
- difference from this microprocessor and the others is because the WE32200 address
- information over the 32-bit range with the help of a disk to work as a slow form of
- memory (Mitchell, 9). The WE32200 microprocessor runs at a frequency of 24MHz
- (Mitchell, 9).
- The 16-bit and 32-bit microprocessors are a mere page in the great book of
- processor history. There will be many new and extremely different processors in the
- near future. A tremendous amount of time and money have been put into the making
- and improving of the microprocessor. The improving and investment of billions of
- dollars are continually going toward the cause of elaborating the microprocessors. The
- evolution of the microprocessor will continue to evolve for the better until the time
- when a much faster and more efficient electronic device is invented. This is turn will
- create a whole new and powerful generation of computers. Hopefully this paper has
- given the reader some insight into the world of microprocessor and how much work
- has been put into the manufacturing of the microprocessor over the years.
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- The Evolution of The Microprocessor
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- November 25, 1996
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- Bibliography
-
- Mitchel, H.J. 32-bit Microprocessors. Boston: CRC Press. 1986,1991
- Titus, Christopher A. 16-Bit Microprocessors. Indiana: Howard W. Sams & Co., Inc.
- 1981
- Aumiaux, M. Microprocessor Systems. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 1982
- Givone, Donald D.; Rosser, Robert P. Microprocessors/Microcomputers. New York:
- McGraw-Hill Book Company. 1980
- Avtar, Singh. 16-Bit and 32-Bit Microprocessors: Architecture, Software, and Interfacing
- Techniques: New Jersey. Englewood Cliffs. 1991
-