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Inventors Of The Modern Computer
Intel 4004
The World's First Single Chip Microprocessor
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In
November, 1971, a company called Intel publicly introduced the world's
first single chip microprocessor, the Intel 4004 (U.S. Patent #3,821,715),
invented by Intel
engineers Federico Faggin, Marcian E. (Ted) Hoff and Stan Mazor. After
the invention of integrated
circuits revolutionized computer design, the only place to go was down
-- in size that is. The Intel 4004 chip took the integrated circuit down
one step further by placing all the parts that made a computer think (i.e.
central processing unit, memory, input and output controls) on one small
chip. Programming intelligence into inanimate objects had now become possible.
The History of Intel
In
1968, Bob Noyce
and Gordon Moore were two unhappy engineers working for the Fairchild
Semiconductor Company who decided to quit and create their own company
at a time when many Fairchild employees were leaving to create start-ups.
People like Noyce and Moore were nicknamed the "Fairchildren".
Bob
Noyce typed himself a one page idea of what he wanted to do with his new
company, and that was enough to convince San Francisco venture capitalist
Art Rock to back Noyce's and Moore's new venture. Rock raised $2.5 million
dollars in less than 2 days.
The
name "Moore Noyce" was already trademarked by a hotel chain, so the two
founders decided upon the name "Intel" for their new company, a shortened
version of "integrated electronics".
Intel's
first money making product was the 3101 Schottky bipolar 64-bit static
random access memory (SRAM) chip. In late 1969, a potential client from
Japan called Busicom, asked to have twelve custom chips designed. Separate
chips for keyboard scanning, display control, printer control and other
functions for a Busicom-manufactured calculator.
Intel
did not have the manpower for the job but they did have the brainpower
to come up with a solution. Intel engineer, Ted Hoff decided that Intel
could build one chip to do the work of twelve. Intel and Busicom agreed
and funded the new programmable, general-purpose logic chip.
Federico
Faggin headed the design team along with Ted Hoff and Stan Mazor, who wrote
the software for the new chip. Nine months later, a revolution was born.
At 1/8th inch wide by 1/6th inch long and consisting of 2,300 MOS (metal
oxide semiconductor) transistors,
the baby chip had as much power as the ENIAC,
which had filled 3,000 cubic feet with 18,000 vacuum tubes.
Cleverly,
Intel decided to buy back the design and marketing rights to the 4004 from
Busicom for $60,000. The next year Busicom went bankrupt, they never produced
a product using the 4004. Intel followed a clever marketing plan to encourage
the development of applications for the 4004 chip, leading to its widespread
use within months.
The Intel 4004
The
4004 was the world's first universal microprocessor. In the late 1960s,
many scientists had discussed the possibility of a computer on a chip,
but nearly everyone felt that integrated circuit technology was not yet
ready to support such a chip. Intel's Ted Hoff felt differently; he was
the first person to recognize that the new silicon-gated MOS technology
might make a single-chip CPU (central processing unit) possible.
Hoff
and the Intel team developed such an architecture with just over 2,300
transistors in an area of only 3 by 4 millimetres. With its 4-bit CPU,
command register, decoder, decoding control, control monitoring of machine
commands and interim register, the 4004 was one heck of a little invention.
Today's 64-bit microprocessors are still based on similar designs, and
the microprocessor is still the most complex mass-produced product ever
with more than 5.5 million transistors performing hundreds of millions
of calculations each second - numbers that are sure to be outdated fast.
The Pioneer 10 spacecraft used the 4004 microprocessor. It was launched
on March 2, 1972 and was the first spacecraft and microprocessor to enter
the Asteroid Belt.
Related
Links
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with and biographies of the inventors, different microprocessors and more
information on Intel.
all artwork ©MaryBellis
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