This is a list of microprocessors.[1]

Altera

AMD

Apollo

ARM

Atmel

AT&T

Bell Labs

BLX IC Design Corporation

Broadcom

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

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

STMicroelectronics

Tesla

Texas Instruments

Toshiba

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
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