- published: 11 Jan 2014
- views: 1575
The Intel 8008 ("eight-thousand-eight" or "eighty-oh-eight") is an early byte-oriented microprocessor designed and manufactured by Intel and introduced in April 1972. It was an 8-bit CPU with an external 14-bit address bus that could address 16KB of memory. Originally known as the 1201, the chip was commissioned by Computer Terminal Corporation (CTC) to implement an instruction set of their design for their Datapoint 2200 programmable terminal. As the chip was delayed and did not meet CTC's performance goals, the 2200 ended up using CTC's own TTL based CPU instead. An agreement permitted Intel to market the chip to other customers after Seiko expressed an interest in using it for a calculator.
CTC formed in San Antonio in 1968 under the direction of Austin O. "Gus" Roche and Phil Ray, both NASA engineers. Roche, in particular, was primarily interested in producing a desktop computer. However, given the immaturity of the market, the company's business plan mentioned only a Teletype Model 33 ASR replacement, which shipped as the Datapoint 3300. The case was deliberately designed to fit in the same space as an IBM Selectric typewriter, and used a video screen shaped to be the same aspect ratio as an IBM punched card. Although commercially successful, the 3300 had ongoing heat problems due to the amount of circuitry packed into such a small space.
Coordinates: 37°23′16.54″N 121°57′48.74″W / 37.3879278°N 121.9635389°W / 37.3879278; -121.9635389
Intel Corporation (better known as Intel) is an American multinational technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California. Intel is one of the world's largest and highest valued semiconductor chip makers, based on revenue. It is the inventor of the x86 series of microprocessors, the processors found in most personal computers. Intel supplies processors for computer system manufacturers such as Apple, Samsung, HP and Dell. Intel also makes motherboard chipsets, network interface controllers and integrated circuits, flash memory, graphics chips, embedded processors and other devices related to communications and computing.
Intel Corporation was founded on July 18, 1968 by semiconductor pioneers Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore and widely associated with the executive leadership and vision of Andrew Grove, Intel combines advanced chip design capability with a leading-edge manufacturing capability.
This is my fully functional Mark-8 personal minicomputer using Intel's first 8 bit microprocessor, the 8008. It is widely recognized as the first personal computer. It was designed by Jon Titus and was introduced in the July 1974 issue of Radio Electronics. My version is built from "scratch" using universal PC boards and point to point wiring.
Computer Terminal Corporation 2200 terminal This terminal was why Intel had the first 8 bit Microprocessor - Intel 8008 in 1972 Subscribe to my channel http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=lcfgroup My Blog story about the 2200 http://bugbookmuseum.blogspot.com/2014/06/vintage-computers-datapoint-2200.html http://www.microcomputermuseum.com Short story about the origin of the Intel 8008 microprocessor. The Teletype was the communications terminal used from the late 50's until in the 80s - first as a data terminal connected to the telephone system with a modem. It was used to send messages to users and mostly for sending and receiving telegrams. Later the Teletype was used for a minicomputer printer and paper tape punch to store the data. Long distant voice calling ...
This is the first power up and running of a small program for the Vintage Computer Federation's Scelbi 8H replica. It uses an Intel 8008 microprocessor running at 500khz.
The signal at the top is HIGH while the microcontroller is writing data on the bus of the 8008 CPU, i.e. in state T3. The second and third signals are S2 and S1. The signal at the bottom is the D7 signal on the bus of the CPU. It toggles slowly between 0 and 1 in state T1, changing after every 128 instructions as part of the low byte of the program counter. It's always 0 in state T2 indicating a cycle of type PCI (instruction read). And in T3, the microcontroller drives it high for the most significant bit of the NOP instruction (0xC0). In T4, it's always 1, and in T5 always 0, but I don't know if that has any significance. Visit the blog entry of this project: http://web.me.com/aschweiz/Website/Blog/Entries/2011/11/6_Creating_a_test_tool_for_the_Intel_8008_CPU_(part_2).html
This is the Intel Intellec 8 mod 80 development machine. It is equipped with the Intel 8080 microprocessor. This machine was also used for the Intel 8008 processor. But then this machine has a different board for the CPU of course. To start the debugger a simple jump ha been done to address 3800. To get here you have to enter C3 00 38 in the memory starting at address 0. This is demonstrated here.
I am trying to build an Intel 8008 processor with some specs of the 4004! What I mean is I am going to build the 8008 because I want an 8 bit cpu, but the memory specs are going to be that of the 4004. I am by no means good with building CPU's, I am going to need help. If you are interested send me a Personal Message on YouTube, or find me on ORE. If I am not on ORE, than send me a mail on ORE. I have my CLE ALU that I have a tutorial on how to make, Also I have 2, 8 byte registers on my cpu. Find my custom Pc page on facebook https://www.facebook.com/AlexsCustomPcs Server Ips) Build mc.openredstone.org School sc.openredstone.org survival openredstone.org Teamspeak ts.openredstone.org Map download of my single player world (ignore the names lol) THIS MAP IS UPDATED! http://www.mediaf...
Bill Pentz (inside the DigiBarn computer museum) is interviewed by Al Lundell about the surviving artifacts from the Intel 8008 microcomputer built at Cal State Sacramento in 1972-73. This is the earliest complete microcomputer system known, with interfaces to a color monitor, hard disk, cassette tape, paper tape, and a modem link to a mainframe. The system had a proto-DOS (Disk Operating System) based on the Basic Assembler Language (BAL) from IBM all loaded into PROMs. This was a feat not achieved again by microcomputers until 1978. Digibarn TV Producer, Videographer: Allan Lundell Curator: Bruce Damer Interviewee: Bill Pentz
Bill Pentz (outside the DigiBarn Computer Museum) talks about the story of the Intel 8008 microcomputer built at Cal State Sacramento in 1972-73 and much more! This is the Pre-PC history well before the Homebrew clubs and Apple. Digibarn TV Producer, Videographer: Allan Lundell Curator: Bruce Damer Interviewee: Bill Pentz
Please note: This computer is for sale along with some other artifacts. See my recently posted video for details: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyB2d8m_MeY This very early micro computer was built by the Univac Research & Development Division in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1972. It was built around the Intel SIM8-01 development system which is also called the MCS-8 computer. It features a very early SIM8-01 board which was ordered in April of 1972. Construction of the computer took place in the summer of 1972 and by the fall, the computer was being programmed and demonstrated to internal Univac groups and the military. This makes this computer the earliest known 8-bit system to be completed and operational.The computer interface was designed by Univac and the system includes the main comput...
Intel 8080 Der Intel 8080 ist ein 1974 eingeführter 8-Bit-Mikroprozessor in NMOS-Technologie von Intel.Er wird allgemein als erster vollwertiger Mikroprozessor angesehen.Als Nachfolger des Intel 8008 war sein Befehlssatz zu diesem quellcodekompatibel, allerdings nicht binärkompatibel, sodass Programme neu assembliert werden mussten. ------------Bild-Copyright-Informationen-------- Urheber Info: Appaloosa Lizenz Link: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0 Lizenz: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0) Urheber: Appaloosa (//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Appaloosa) ✪Video ist an blinde Nutzer gerichtet ✪Text verfügbar unter der Lizens CC-BY-SA ✪Bild Quelle im Video
The Intel 8080 ("eighty-eighty") was the second 8-bit microprocessor designed and manufactured by Intel and was released in April 1974. It was an extended and enhanced variant of the earlier 8008 design, although without binary compatibility. The initial specified clock frequency limit was 2 MHz, and with common instructions having execution times of 4, 5, 7, 10, or 11 cycles this meant that it operated at an effective speed of a few hundred thousand instructions per second. The 8080 has sometimes been labeled "the first truly usable microprocessor", although earlier microprocessors were used for calculators, cash registers, computer terminals, industrial robots and other applications. The architecture of the 8080 strongly influenced Intel's 8086 CPU architecture, which spawned the x86 fam...
In the late 1970's and early 1980's, I was part of an effort to start a computer museum in Minnesota. It didn't happen, but I collected lots of neat stuff in the process. The neatest computer I ever found was an Intel SIM8-01 computer with an elaborate red translucent plastic case. A little research leads me to believe it might well be one of the first 8-bit microcomputers ever assembled. Built around the Intel 8008 CPU, it inspired many of the early computers built—like the Mark 8, Micral, MCM/70, and the SCELBI-8H. Now if I could determine who built this one and why! UPDATE: I have discovered the Univac built this computer during the summer of 1972, making it one of the very first 8-bit systems ever assembled and demonstrated! I have posted another YouTube video with the details.
Gary Boone demonstrates a working Texas Instruments TMX-1795 8-bit microprocessor that was manufactured in early 1971. The TI laptop has been modified to use the TMX-1795 for all operations. Everything displayed is being executed on a 1971 vintage 8-bit microprocessor. This demo unit was built in 1993 to be used as a jury exhibit in a patent lawsuit, although it was never used for that purpose. Its first public demonstration occurred a few days later, at the 1996 Microprocessor Forum, during the 25th Anniversary of the Microprocessor celebration. The TMX-1795 was designed under contract for Computer Terminal Corporation (CTC, later known as Datapoint). Intel had a competing contract, although its equivalent microprocessor, the Intel 8008, was not completed until late 1971. Recording mad...
[Recorded: June 17,1998] Unquestionably, one of the major design innovations of this century has been the graphical user interface (GUI) for computers. With its desktop, icons, pop-up and pull-down menus and ubiquitous windows, the GUI has made computers much easier to use. Though over 100 million people around the world are now using GUI's, few outside of the Human-Computer Interaction field are aware of the history of its design. The first GUI ever developed was the work of Dr. Douglas Engelbart, a researcher at SRI in the 1960s. His visionary and pioneering design and prototypes succeeded in producing the world's first screen-based windows, cursor-selectable pop-up menus, as well as a mouse with which to interact with them. Though these innovations were truly revolutionary, it was ...
Merhaba arkadaşlar. Bugün sizlerle birlikte fiyat performans oranı ile oldukça dikkat çeken windows 8.1 işletim sistemli reeder w7ic model isimli tableti inceleyeceğiz. 169 TL fiyatı ile geniş bir ulaşılabilirlik sağlayan tablet, geniş kitlelere uygun fiyata makul performans vaat ediyor. 4 Çekirdekli İntel Atom Z3537G işlemcisi ile yeterli performansı sunarken 1GB sistem belli ile de makul deneyim vaad ediyor. Videoda diğer detayları alabilirsiniz. Keyifli dakikalar dileklerimle :)
Federico Faggin, lead engineer on the world's first microprocessor TITLE: Microelectronics & Microprocessors: The Early Years Date & time: Feb 19, 10:30am-12:00pm, 540a/b Cory Hall Talk abstract: Today we are so used to the enormous capabilities of microelectronics that we can hardly imagine what it might have been like in the early sixties and seventies. This lecture will illustrate the environment existing in the early years of the microelectronics revolution, and describe the seminal inventions that produced in less than 10 years the first integrated circuit and the first microprocessor, as experienced by one of the early pioneers, Federico Faggin, the co-inventor of the MOS silicon gate technology and co-inventor of the microprocessor -- inventions that changed forever our way of l...
Türkiye'de en çok satan tabletler olan, 200 lira civarındaki ucuz tabletlerden biz de aldık ve kullandık. Artı ve eksi yönleri ile deneyimlerimizi paylaşıyoruz. http://www.teknoseyir.com/82513/ucuz-tablet-almak-mantikli-mi-israf-mi/ Teknolojiye dair son haberleri kaçırmamak için ABONE olun ► https://goo.gl/z4MuvY Web Sitemiz: http://teknoseyir.com/ TeknoSeyir Ailesi Kanalları: Oyun Kanalımız: Gamende ► https://goo.gl/MN4ExT Otomobil Kanalımız: OtoSeyir ► https://goo.gl/ZXgxLT Sosyal Medya Hesaplarımız: Twitter ►https://twitter.com/teknoseyir Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/TeknoSeyir TeknoSeyir kanalı, Türkiye'nin yeni nesil teknoloji platformu TeknoSeyir'in teknolojiyle ilgili son gelişmeleri verdiği YouTube hesabıdır. Teknolojik ürün incelemelerine, teknolojiyle ilgili son geli...
The collection has been sold. Thanks for interest.
Mobile 3D-Projektion lässt Georgentor tanzen. Intel präsentiert mit weltweit einzigem Multi Media Offroad Vehicle atemberaubende Lasershow beim Dresdner Stadtfest 2011. Verantwortlich für die Umsetzung ist der Künstler Markos Aristides Kern, der zu den bekanntesten Künstlern im Bereich der visuellen Live Performances und Gebäudeprojektionen zählt. Die musikalische Begleitung übernimmt MOONBOOTICA. http://www.youtube.com/channel/UChMpsiZnCYMqE5NVgDTTocw?sub_confirmation=1