fbpx
Wikipedia

Intel 8008

The Intel 8008 ("eight-thousand-eight" or "eighty-oh-eight") is an early byte-oriented microprocessor designed by Computer Terminal Corporation (CTC), implemented and manufactured by Intel, and introduced in April 1972. It is an 8-bit CPU with an external 14-bit address bus that could address 16 KB 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.

Intel 8008
An Intel C8008-1 processor variant with purple ceramic, gold-plated metal lid and pins.
General information
LaunchedMid 1972
Discontinued1983[1]
Designed byComputer Terminal Corporation (CTC)
Common manufacturer(s)
  • Intel
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate200 kHz to 800 kHz
Data width8 bits
Address width14 bits
Architecture and classification
ApplicationComputer terminals, calculators, bottling machines, 1970s ASEA industrial robots[2] (IRB 6), simple computers, etc.
Technology node10 µm
Instruction set8008
Physical specifications
Transistors
  • 3,500
Package(s)
Socket(s)
History
SuccessorIntel 8080
Support status
Unsupported

History

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 have the same aspect ratio as an IBM punched card.[3] Although commercially successful, the 3300 had ongoing heat problems due to the amount of circuitry packed into such a small space.

In order to address the heating and other issues, a re-design started that featured the CPU part of the internal circuitry re-implemented on a single chip. Looking for a company able to produce their chip design, Roche turned to Intel, then primarily a vendor of memory chips.[3] Roche met with Bob Noyce, who expressed concern with the concept; John Frassanito recalls that "Noyce said it was an intriguing idea, and that Intel could do it, but it would be a dumb move. He said that if you have a computer chip, you can only sell one chip per computer, while with memory, you can sell hundreds of chips per computer."[3] Another major concern was that Intel's existing customer base purchased their memory chips for use with their own processor designs; if Intel introduced their own processor, they might be seen as a competitor, and their customers might look elsewhere for memory. Nevertheless, Noyce agreed to a $50,000 development contract in early 1970. Texas Instruments (TI) was also brought in as a second supplier.

TI was able to make samples of the 1201 based on Intel drawings,[citation needed] but these proved to be buggy and were rejected. Intel's own versions were delayed. CTC decided to re-implement the new version of the terminal using discrete TTL instead of waiting for a single-chip CPU. The new system was released as the Datapoint 2200 in the spring 1970, with their first sale to General Mills on May 25, 1970.[3] CTC paused development of the 1201 after the 2200 was released, as it was no longer needed. Six months later, Seiko approached Intel, expressing an interest in using the 1201 in a scientific calculator, likely after seeing the success of the simpler Intel 4004 used by Busicom in their business calculators. A small re-design followed, under the leadership of Federico Faggin, the designer of the 4004, now project leader of the 1201, expanding from a 16-pin to 18-pin design, and the new 1201 was delivered to CTC in late 1971.[3]

By that point, CTC had once again moved on, this time to the Datapoint 2200 II, which was faster. The 1201 was no longer powerful enough for the new model. CTC voted to end their involvement with the 1201, leaving the design's intellectual property to Intel instead of paying the $50,000 contract. Intel renamed it the 8008 and put it in their catalog in April 1972 priced at $120. This renaming tried to ride off the success of the 4004 chip, by presenting the 8008 as simply a 4 to 8 port, but the 8008 is not based on the 4004. [4] The 8008 went on to be a commercially successful design. This was followed by the Intel 8080, and then the hugely successful Intel x86 family.[3]

One of the first teams to build a complete system around the 8008 was Bill Pentz' team at California State University, Sacramento. The Sac State 8008 was possibly the first true microcomputer, with a disk operating system built with IBM Basic assembly language in PROM, all driving a color display, hard drive, keyboard, modem, audio/paper tape reader and printer.[5] The project started in the spring of 1972, and with key help from Tektronix the system was fully functional a year later. Bill assisted Intel with the MCS-8 kit and provided key input to the Intel 8080 instruction set, which helped make it useful for the industry and hobbyists.

In the UK, a team at S. E. Laboratories Engineering (EMI) led by Tom Spink in 1972 built a microcomputer based on a pre-release sample of the 8008. Joe Hardman extended the chip with an external stack. This, among other things, gave it power-fail save and recovery. Joe also developed a direct screen printer. The operating system was written using a meta-assembler developed by L. Crawford and J. Parnell for a Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11.[6] The operating system was burnt into a PROM. It was interrupt-driven, queued, and based on a fixed page size for programs and data. An operational prototype was prepared for management, who decided not to continue with the project.

The 8008 was the CPU for the very first commercial non-calculator personal computers (excluding the Datapoint 2200 itself): the US SCELBI kit and the pre-built French Micral N and Canadian MCM/70. It was also the controlling microprocessor for the first several models in Hewlett-Packard's 2640 family of computer terminals.

Intel offered an instruction set simulator for the 8008 named INTERP/8. It was written in FORTRAN.

Design

 
i8008 microarchitecture
Intel 8008 registers
13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 (bit position)
Main registers
  A Accumulator
  B B register
  C C register
  D D register
  E E register
  H H register (indirect)
  L L register (indirect)
Program counter
PC Program Counter
Push-down address call stack
AS Call level 1
AS Call level 2
AS Call level 3
AS Call level 4
AS Call level 5
AS Call level 6
AS Call level 7
Flags
  C P Z S Flags

The 8008 was implemented in 10 μm silicon-gate enhancement-mode PMOS logic. Initial versions could work at clock frequencies up to 0.5 MHz. This was later increased in the 8008-1 to a specified maximum of 0.8 MHz. Instructions take between 5 and 11 T-states, where each T-state is 2 clock cycles.[7] Register–register loads and ALU operations take 5T (20 μs at 0.5 MHz), register–memory 8T (32 μs), while calls and jumps (when taken) take 11 T-states (44 μs).[8] The 8008 is a little slower in terms of instructions per second (36,000 to 80,000 at 0.8 MHz) than the 4-bit Intel 4004 and Intel 4040.[9] but since the 8008 processes data 8 bits at a time and can access significantly more RAM, in most applications it has a significant speed advantage over these processors. The 8008 has 3,500 transistors.[10][11][12]

The chip (limited by its 18-pin DIP) has a single 8-bit bus and requires a significant amount of external support logic. For example, the 14-bit address, which can access "16 K × 8 bits of memory", needs to be latched by some of this logic into an external memory address register (MAR). The 8008 can access 8 input ports and 24 output ports.[7]

For controller and CRT terminal use, this is an acceptable design, but it is rather cumbersome to use for most other tasks, at least compared to the next generations of microprocessors. A few early computer designs were based on it, but most would use the later and greatly improved Intel 8080 instead.[citation needed]

Related processor designs

The subsequent 40-pin NMOS Intel 8080 expanded upon the 8008 registers and instruction set and implements a more efficient external bus interface (using the 22 additional pins). Despite a close architectural relationship, the 8080 was not made binary compatible with the 8008, so an 8008 program would not run on an 8080. However, as two different assembly syntaxes were used by Intel at the time, the 8080 could be used in an 8008 assembly-language backward-compatible fashion.[13]

The Intel 8085 is an electrically modernized version of the 8080 that uses depletion-mode transistors and also added two new instructions.[14]

The Intel 8086, the original x86 processor, is a non-strict extension of the 8080, so it loosely resembles the original Datapoint 2200 design as well. Almost every Datapoint 2200 and 8008 instruction has an equivalent not only in the instruction set of the 8080, 8085, and Z80, but also in the instruction set of modern x86 processors (although the instruction encodings are different).[15]

Features

The 8008 architecture includes the following features:[citation needed]

  • Seven 8-bit "scratchpad" registers: The main accumulator (A) and six other registers (B, C, D, E, H, and L).
  • 14-bit program counter (PC).
  • Seven-level push-down address call stack. Eight registers are actually used, with the top-most register being the PC.
  • Four condition code status flags: carry (C), even parity (P), zero (Z), and sign (S).
  • Indirect memory access using the H and L registers (HL) as a 14-bit data pointer (the upper two bits are ignored).

Example code

The following 8008 assembly source code is for a subroutine named MEMCPY that copies a block of data bytes of a given size from one location to another.

  001700 000 001701 000 001702 000 001703 000 001704 000 001705 000 002000 066 304 002002 056 003 002004 327 002005 060 002006 317 002007 302 002010 261 002011 053 002012 302 002013 024 001 002015 320 002016 301 002017 034 000 002021 310 002022 066 300 002024 056 003 002026 302 002027 207 002030 340 002031 060 002032 301 002033 217 002034 350 002035 364 002036 337 002037 066 302 002041 056 003 002043 302 002044 207 002045 340 002046 060 002047 301 002050 217 002051 350 002035 364 002052 373 002053 104 007 004 002056 
; MEMCPY -- ; Copy a block of memory from one location to another. ; ; Entry parameters ; SRC: 14-bit address of source data block ; DST: 14-bit address of target data block ; CNT: 14-bit count of bytes to copy    ORG 1700Q ;Data at 001700q SRC DFB 0 ;SRC, low byte  DFB 0 ; high byte DST DFB 0 ;DST, low byte  DFB 0 ; high byte CNT DFB 0 ;CNT, low byte  DFB 0 ; high byte    ORG 2000Q ;Code at 002000q MEMCPY LLI CNT+0 ;HL = addr(CNT)  LHI CNT+1  LCM ;BC = CNT  INL  LBM LOOP LAC ;If BC = 0,  ORB  RTZ ;Return DECCNT LAC ;BC = BC - 1  SUI 1  LCA  LAB  SBI 0  LBA GETSRC LLI SRC+0 ;HL = addr(SRC)  LHI SRC+1  LAC ;HL = SRC + BC  ADM ;E = C + (HL)  LEA ;(lower sum)  INL ;point to upper SRC  LAB  ACM ;H = B + (HL) + CY  LHA ;(upper sum)  LLE ;L = E  LDM ;Load D from (HL) GETDST LLI DST+0 ;HL = addr(DST)  LHI DST+1  LAC ;HL = DST + BC  ADM ;ADD code same as above  LEA  INL   LAB  ACM  LHA  LLE  LMD ;Store D to (HL)  JMP LOOP ;Repeat the loop  END 

In the code above, all values are given in octal. Locations SRC, DST, and CNT are 16-bit parameters for the subroutine named MEMCPY. In actuality, only 14 bits of the values are used, since the CPU has only a 14-bit addressable memory space. The values are stored in little-endian format, although this is an arbitrary choice, since the CPU is incapable of reading or writing more than a single byte into memory at a time. Since there is no instruction to load a register directly from a given memory address, the HL register pair must first be loaded with the address, and the target register can then be loaded from the M operand, which is an indirect load from the memory location in the HL register pair. The BC register pair is loaded with the CNT parameter value and decremented at the end of the loop until it becomes zero. Note that most of the instructions used occupy a single 8-bit opcode.

Designers

  • CTC (Instruction set and architecture): Victor Poor and Harry Pyle.
  • Intel (Implementation in silicon):
    • Ted Hoff, Stan Mazor and Larry Potter (IBM Chief Scientist) proposed a single-chip implementation of the CTC architecture, using RAM-register memory rather than shift-register memory, and also added a few instructions and interrupt facility. The 8008 (originally called 1201) chip design started before the 4004 development. Hoff and Mazor, however, could not and did not develop a "silicon design" because they were neither chip designers nor process developers, and furthermore the necessary silicon-gate-based design methodology and circuits, under development by Federico Faggin for the 4004, were not yet available.[16]
    • Federico Faggin, having finished the design of the 4004, became leader of the project from January 1971 until its successful completion in April 1972, after it had been suspended – for lack of progress – for about seven months.
    • Hal Feeney, project engineer, did the detailed logic design, circuit design, and physical layout under Faggin's supervision, employing the same design methodology that Faggin had originally developed for the Intel 4004 microprocessor, and utilizing the basic circuits he had developed for the 4004. A combined "HF" logo was etched onto the chip about halfway between the D5 and D6 bonding pads.

Second sources

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Life Cycle of a CPU". www.cpushack.com.
  2. ^ . March 19, 2014. Archived from the original on March 19, 2014. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Wood, Lamont (August 8, 2008), "Forgotten PC history: The true origins of the personal computer", Computerworld
  4. ^ Ken Shirriff in an interview with Bryan Cantril, Jess Frazzelle, published by Oxide Computing Podcast "First, the 4004 and the 8008 are entirely different chips. Marketing makes them sound like it's just a 4-bit and 8-bit version, but they're totally different." https://oxide.computer/podcast/on-the-metal-13-ken-shirriff/#t=19:52
  5. ^ "Inside the world's long-lost first microcomputer". cnet.com. January 8, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  6. ^ Brunel University, 1974. Master of Technology dissertation, L. R. Crawford.
  7. ^ a b "MCS-8 Micro Computer Set Users Manual" (PDF). Intel Corporation. 1972. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
  8. ^ "Intel 8008 Opcodes". Retrieved December 4, 2010.
  9. ^ "Intel 8008 (i8008) microprocessor family". CPU World. 2003–2010. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
  10. ^ Intel. . Archived from the original on September 4, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2009.
  11. ^ Intel (2012). "Intel Chips: timeline poster".
  12. ^ Intel (2008). "Microprocessor Quick Reference Guide".
  13. ^ See the Z80 article for a description.
  14. ^ See the Intel 8085 article for a description.
  15. ^ See the Intel 8086 article for a description.
  16. ^ Faggin, Federico; Hoff, Marcian E.; Mazor, Stanley; Shima, Masatoshi (December 1996), "The History of the 4004", IEEE Micro, Los Alamitos: IEEE Computer Society, 16 (6): 10–19, doi:10.1109/40.546561, ISSN 0272-1732

External links

  • MCS-8 User Manual with 8008 data sheet (1972)
  • Wood, Lamont (August 8, 2008). "Forgotten PC history: The true origins of the personal computer". Computer World.
  • The Intel 8008 support page unofficial
  • The DigiBarn Computer Museum's page on Bill Pentz' Sacramento State machine, a full microcomputer built around the 8008
  • Martin, Donald P. (1974). Microcomputer Design. Martin Research.
  • Runyan, Grant (April 1977). "Now — BASIC for the 8008 — Even!". Kilobaud Magazine: 116–8.
  • "A BASIC language interpreter for the Intel 8008 microprocessor". University of Illinois. 1974.
  • 8008 Assembly Language Reference Card
  • Shirriff, Ken (December 2016). "Die photos and analysis of the revolutionary 8008 microprocessor, 45 years old".
    • — (February 2017). "Reverse-engineering the surprisingly advanced ALU of the 8008 microprocessor".
    • — (October 2020). "How the bootstrap load made the historic Intel 8008 processor possible".
    • — (November 2020). "Reverse-engineering the carry-lookahead circuit in the Intel 8008 processor".

intel, 8008, eight, thousand, eight, eighty, eight, early, byte, oriented, microprocessor, designed, computer, terminal, corporation, implemented, manufactured, intel, introduced, april, 1972, with, external, address, that, could, address, memory, originally, . The Intel 8008 eight thousand eight or eighty oh eight is an early byte oriented microprocessor designed by Computer Terminal Corporation CTC implemented and manufactured by Intel and introduced in April 1972 It is an 8 bit CPU with an external 14 bit address bus that could address 16 KB 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 Intel 8008An Intel C8008 1 processor variant with purple ceramic gold plated metal lid and pins General informationLaunchedMid 1972Discontinued1983 1 Designed byComputer Terminal Corporation CTC Common manufacturer s IntelPerformanceMax CPU clock rate200 kHz to 800 kHzData width8 bitsAddress width14 bitsArchitecture and classificationApplicationComputer terminals calculators bottling machines 1970s ASEA industrial robots 2 IRB 6 simple computers etc Technology node10 µmInstruction set8008Physical specificationsTransistors3 500Package s 18 pin DIPSocket s DIP18HistorySuccessorIntel 8080Support statusUnsupported Contents 1 History 2 Design 2 1 Related processor designs 2 2 Features 3 Example code 4 Designers 5 Second sources 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditCTC 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 have the same aspect ratio as an IBM punched card 3 Although commercially successful the 3300 had ongoing heat problems due to the amount of circuitry packed into such a small space In order to address the heating and other issues a re design started that featured the CPU part of the internal circuitry re implemented on a single chip Looking for a company able to produce their chip design Roche turned to Intel then primarily a vendor of memory chips 3 Roche met with Bob Noyce who expressed concern with the concept John Frassanito recalls that Noyce said it was an intriguing idea and that Intel could do it but it would be a dumb move He said that if you have a computer chip you can only sell one chip per computer while with memory you can sell hundreds of chips per computer 3 Another major concern was that Intel s existing customer base purchased their memory chips for use with their own processor designs if Intel introduced their own processor they might be seen as a competitor and their customers might look elsewhere for memory Nevertheless Noyce agreed to a 50 000 development contract in early 1970 Texas Instruments TI was also brought in as a second supplier TI was able to make samples of the 1201 based on Intel drawings citation needed but these proved to be buggy and were rejected Intel s own versions were delayed CTC decided to re implement the new version of the terminal using discrete TTL instead of waiting for a single chip CPU The new system was released as the Datapoint 2200 in the spring 1970 with their first sale to General Mills on May 25 1970 3 CTC paused development of the 1201 after the 2200 was released as it was no longer needed Six months later Seiko approached Intel expressing an interest in using the 1201 in a scientific calculator likely after seeing the success of the simpler Intel 4004 used by Busicom in their business calculators A small re design followed under the leadership of Federico Faggin the designer of the 4004 now project leader of the 1201 expanding from a 16 pin to 18 pin design and the new 1201 was delivered to CTC in late 1971 3 By that point CTC had once again moved on this time to the Datapoint 2200 II which was faster The 1201 was no longer powerful enough for the new model CTC voted to end their involvement with the 1201 leaving the design s intellectual property to Intel instead of paying the 50 000 contract Intel renamed it the 8008 and put it in their catalog in April 1972 priced at 120 This renaming tried to ride off the success of the 4004 chip by presenting the 8008 as simply a 4 to 8 port but the 8008 is not based on the 4004 4 The 8008 went on to be a commercially successful design This was followed by the Intel 8080 and then the hugely successful Intel x86 family 3 One of the first teams to build a complete system around the 8008 was Bill Pentz team at California State University Sacramento The Sac State 8008 was possibly the first true microcomputer with a disk operating system built with IBM Basic assembly language in PROM all driving a color display hard drive keyboard modem audio paper tape reader and printer 5 The project started in the spring of 1972 and with key help from Tektronix the system was fully functional a year later Bill assisted Intel with the MCS 8 kit and provided key input to the Intel 8080 instruction set which helped make it useful for the industry and hobbyists In the UK a team at S E Laboratories Engineering EMI led by Tom Spink in 1972 built a microcomputer based on a pre release sample of the 8008 Joe Hardman extended the chip with an external stack This among other things gave it power fail save and recovery Joe also developed a direct screen printer The operating system was written using a meta assembler developed by L Crawford and J Parnell for a Digital Equipment Corporation PDP 11 6 The operating system was burnt into a PROM It was interrupt driven queued and based on a fixed page size for programs and data An operational prototype was prepared for management who decided not to continue with the project The 8008 was the CPU for the very first commercial non calculator personal computers excluding the Datapoint 2200 itself the US SCELBI kit and the pre built French Micral N and Canadian MCM 70 It was also the controlling microprocessor for the first several models in Hewlett Packard s 2640 family of computer terminals Intel offered an instruction set simulator for the 8008 named INTERP 8 It was written in FORTRAN Design Edit i8008 microarchitecture Intel 8008 registers 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 bit position Main registers A Accumulator B B register C C register D D register E E register H H register indirect L L register indirect Program counterPC Program CounterPush down address call stackAS Call level 1AS Call level 2AS Call level 3AS Call level 4AS Call level 5AS Call level 6AS Call level 7Flags C P Z S FlagsThe 8008 was implemented in 10 mm silicon gate enhancement mode PMOS logic Initial versions could work at clock frequencies up to 0 5 MHz This was later increased in the 8008 1 to a specified maximum of 0 8 MHz Instructions take between 5 and 11 T states where each T state is 2 clock cycles 7 Register register loads and ALU operations take 5T 20 ms at 0 5 MHz register memory 8T 32 ms while calls and jumps when taken take 11 T states 44 ms 8 The 8008 is a little slower in terms of instructions per second 36 000 to 80 000 at 0 8 MHz than the 4 bit Intel 4004 and Intel 4040 9 but since the 8008 processes data 8 bits at a time and can access significantly more RAM in most applications it has a significant speed advantage over these processors The 8008 has 3 500 transistors 10 11 12 The chip limited by its 18 pin DIP has a single 8 bit bus and requires a significant amount of external support logic For example the 14 bit address which can access 16 K 8 bits of memory needs to be latched by some of this logic into an external memory address register MAR The 8008 can access 8 input ports and 24 output ports 7 For controller and CRT terminal use this is an acceptable design but it is rather cumbersome to use for most other tasks at least compared to the next generations of microprocessors A few early computer designs were based on it but most would use the later and greatly improved Intel 8080 instead citation needed Related processor designs Edit The subsequent 40 pin NMOS Intel 8080 expanded upon the 8008 registers and instruction set and implements a more efficient external bus interface using the 22 additional pins Despite a close architectural relationship the 8080 was not made binary compatible with the 8008 so an 8008 program would not run on an 8080 However as two different assembly syntaxes were used by Intel at the time the 8080 could be used in an 8008 assembly language backward compatible fashion 13 The Intel 8085 is an electrically modernized version of the 8080 that uses depletion mode transistors and also added two new instructions 14 The Intel 8086 the original x86 processor is a non strict extension of the 8080 so it loosely resembles the original Datapoint 2200 design as well Almost every Datapoint 2200 and 8008 instruction has an equivalent not only in the instruction set of the 8080 8085 and Z80 but also in the instruction set of modern x86 processors although the instruction encodings are different 15 Features Edit The 8008 architecture includes the following features citation needed Seven 8 bit scratchpad registers The main accumulator A and six other registers B C D E H and L 14 bit program counter PC Seven level push down address call stack Eight registers are actually used with the top most register being the PC Four condition code status flags carry C even parity P zero Z and sign S Indirect memory access using the H and L registers HL as a 14 bit data pointer the upper two bits are ignored Example code EditThe following 8008 assembly source code is for a subroutine named MEMCPY that copies a block of data bytes of a given size from one location to another 001700 000 001701 000 001702 000 001703 000 001704 000 001705 000 002000 066 304 002002 056 003 002004 327 002005 060 002006 317 002007 302 002010 261 002011 053 002012 302 002013 024 001 002015 320 002016 301 002017 034 000 002021 310 002022 066 300 002024 056 003 002026 302 002027 207 002030 340 002031 060 002032 301 002033 217 002034 350 002035 364 002036 337 002037 066 302 002041 056 003 002043 302 002044 207 002045 340 002046 060 002047 301 002050 217 002051 350 002035 364 002052 373 002053 104 007 004 002056 MEMCPY Copy a block of memory from one location to another Entry parameters SRC 14 bit address of source data block DST 14 bit address of target data block CNT 14 bit count of bytes to copy ORG 1700Q Data at 001700q SRC DFB 0 SRC low byte DFB 0 high byte DST DFB 0 DST low byte DFB 0 high byte CNT DFB 0 CNT low byte DFB 0 high byte ORG 2000Q Code at 002000q MEMCPY LLI CNT 0 HL addr CNT LHI CNT 1 LCM BC CNT INL LBM LOOP LAC If BC 0 ORB RTZ Return DECCNT LAC BC BC 1 SUI 1 LCA LAB SBI 0 LBA GETSRC LLI SRC 0 HL addr SRC LHI SRC 1 LAC HL SRC BC ADM E C HL LEA lower sum INL point to upper SRC LAB ACM H B HL CY LHA upper sum LLE L E LDM Load D from HL GETDST LLI DST 0 HL addr DST LHI DST 1 LAC HL DST BC ADM ADD code same as above LEA INL LAB ACM LHA LLE LMD Store D to HL JMP LOOP Repeat the loop ENDIn the code above all values are given in octal Locations SRC DST and CNT are 16 bit parameters for the subroutine named MEMCPY In actuality only 14 bits of the values are used since the CPU has only a 14 bit addressable memory space The values are stored in little endian format although this is an arbitrary choice since the CPU is incapable of reading or writing more than a single byte into memory at a time Since there is no instruction to load a register directly from a given memory address the HL register pair must first be loaded with the address and the target register can then be loaded from the M operand which is an indirect load from the memory location in the HL register pair The BC register pair is loaded with the CNT parameter value and decremented at the end of the loop until it becomes zero Note that most of the instructions used occupy a single 8 bit opcode Designers EditCTC Instruction set and architecture Victor Poor and Harry Pyle Intel Implementation in silicon Ted Hoff Stan Mazor and Larry Potter IBM Chief Scientist proposed a single chip implementation of the CTC architecture using RAM register memory rather than shift register memory and also added a few instructions and interrupt facility The 8008 originally called 1201 chip design started before the 4004 development Hoff and Mazor however could not and did not develop a silicon design because they were neither chip designers nor process developers and furthermore the necessary silicon gate based design methodology and circuits under development by Federico Faggin for the 4004 were not yet available 16 Federico Faggin having finished the design of the 4004 became leader of the project from January 1971 until its successful completion in April 1972 after it had been suspended for lack of progress for about seven months Hal Feeney project engineer did the detailed logic design circuit design and physical layout under Faggin s supervision employing the same design methodology that Faggin had originally developed for the Intel 4004 microprocessor and utilizing the basic circuits he had developed for the 4004 A combined HF logo was etched onto the chip about halfway between the D5 and D6 bonding pads Second sources EditIntel 8008 second sources VEB Mikroelektronik Karl Marx Erfurt MME U808 GDR MicroSystems International MIL MF8008 Siemens SAB8008See also EditMark 8 and SCELBI 8008 based computer kits MCM 70 and Micral pioneering microcomputers PL M the first programming language targeting a microprocessor the Intel 8008 developed by Gary KildallReferences Edit The Life Cycle of a CPU www cpushack com Thirty years in robotics Robotics March 19 2014 Archived from the original on March 19 2014 Retrieved April 11 2018 a b c d e f Wood Lamont August 8 2008 Forgotten PC history The true origins of the personal computer Computerworld Ken Shirriff in an interview with Bryan Cantril Jess Frazzelle published by Oxide Computing Podcast First the 4004 and the 8008 are entirely different chips Marketing makes them sound like it s just a 4 bit and 8 bit version but they re totally different https oxide computer podcast on the metal 13 ken shirriff t 19 52 Inside the world s long lost first microcomputer cnet com January 8 2010 Retrieved April 11 2018 Brunel University 1974 Master of Technology dissertation L R Crawford a b MCS 8 Micro Computer Set Users Manual PDF Intel Corporation 1972 Retrieved December 4 2010 Intel 8008 Opcodes Retrieved December 4 2010 Intel 8008 i8008 microprocessor family CPU World 2003 2010 Retrieved December 4 2010 Intel Gordon Moore and Moore s Law Archived from the original on September 4 2009 Retrieved June 28 2009 Intel 2012 Intel Chips timeline poster Intel 2008 Microprocessor Quick Reference Guide See the Z80 article for a description See the Intel 8085 article for a description See the Intel 8086 article for a description Faggin Federico Hoff Marcian E Mazor Stanley Shima Masatoshi December 1996 The History of the 4004 IEEE Micro Los Alamitos IEEE Computer Society 16 6 10 19 doi 10 1109 40 546561 ISSN 0272 1732External links EditMCS 8 User Manual with 8008 data sheet 1972 Wood Lamont August 8 2008 Forgotten PC history The true origins of the personal computer Computer World The Intel 8008 support page unofficial The DigiBarn Computer Museum s page on Bill Pentz Sacramento State machine a full microcomputer built around the 8008 Martin Donald P 1974 Microcomputer Design Martin Research 1976 Microcomputer Design 2nd ed Martin Research OCLC 911808003 Runyan Grant April 1977 Now BASIC for the 8008 Even Kilobaud Magazine 116 8 A BASIC language interpreter for the Intel 8008 microprocessor University of Illinois 1974 8008 Assembly Language Reference Card Shirriff Ken December 2016 Die photos and analysis of the revolutionary 8008 microprocessor 45 years old February 2017 Reverse engineering the surprisingly advanced ALU of the 8008 microprocessor October 2020 How the bootstrap load made the historic Intel 8008 processor possible November 2020 Reverse engineering the carry lookahead circuit in the Intel 8008 processor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intel 8008 amp oldid 1134279724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.