Electronic industries; Integrated services digital networks; Intel microprocessors; Magazines; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Cover of the May/June 1984 issue of Intel's magazine "Solutions" promoting Intel's ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) capabilities.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel ® 8086 microprocessor package. Clock speed: 5 MHz (.33 MIPS) 8MHz (.66 MIPS) 10 MHz (.75 MIPS). Transistor Count: 29,000. Chip Performance: .75 MIPS (millions of instructions per second).Circuit...
Electronic industries; Memory chip packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® Schottky 3101 Bipolar Ram Memory chip package. The 3101 is the world's first solid state memory device and Intel's first product. The 3101 used Schottky barrier diode, bipolar technology. The...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor. The processor debuted with 42 million transistors and circuit lines of 0.18 microns, 29 years after Intel's first microprocessor. The Intel® Pentium® 4 processor's initial speed was...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's i486 6-inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Intel i860 (Microprocessor); Intel microprocessors; Posters; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Supercomputers; Technology;
Promotional poster depicting Intel's i860 XP Supercomputing Microprocessor.
Electronic industries; Intel innovators; Microscopes; Moore, Gordon E., 1929-; Noyce, Robert N., 1927-1990; People; Photographs; Quality assurance; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology; Women;
Black-and-white photograph of Dr. Gordon E. Moore and Robert N. Noyce. Intel founders Gordon Moore and Bob Noyce inspect chips in Intel's first Santa Clara Fab.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel386™ microprocessor. The Intel386™ microprocessor featured 275,000 transistors--more than 100 times as many as the original 4004. It was a Intel’s first 32-bit chip.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's 8741 Peripheral Interface 4-inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's Pentium 4 12-inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's Pentium III 8-Inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Random access memory; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's 2102 SRAM (Static Random Access Memory) 3-inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Photographs; Random access memory; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of Intel's 1101 SRAM (Static Random Access Memory) 2-inch silicon wafer.
Electronic industries; Frohman, Dov; Intel innovators; People; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Black-and-white photograph of Dr. Dov Frohman. Later becoming President and General Manager of Intel's operations in Israel, Frohman invented the world's first erasable, programmable read-only memory 1702 EPROM, introduced by Intel in 1971.
Busicom; Calculators; Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Manufacturing; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Black-and-white photograph of Busicom calculator. A Japanese calculator manufacturer, Busicom, asked Intel to design a set of chips for a family of programmable calculators. The original design for Busicom's calculator called for at least a dozen...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Memory chip packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Color slide of the Intel 1702 Memory chip package. Dov Frohman, today president of Intel's operations in Israel, invented the world's first erasable, programmable read-only memory 1702 EPROM, introduced by Intel in 1971.