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; 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; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the 3-volt Intel® Advance Boot Block Flash Memory Die. The Intel® Advanced+ Boot Block Flash memory represents a feature-rich solution for low power applications. Intel Advanced+ Boot Block Flash memory devices...
Electronic industries; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the 3101 64-Bit Schottky Bipolar RAM Die. Intel's first successful product, the 3101 Schottky bipolar memory, a 64-bit high speed static random access memory (RAM) was introduced in 1969, just nine months after the...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color photograph of the 80286 microprocessor package. Clock speed: 6MHz (.9 MIPS) 10 MHz (1.5 MIPS) 12 MHz (2.66 MIPS). Transistor Count: 134,000. Chip Performance: 1.5 MIPS (millions of instructions per second). Circuit Line Size: 1.5 microns....
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; 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.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Memory chip packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the Flash Memory Packages. The 64k 27F64 and 256k 27F256 in 28-pin packages; and the 32-pin 256k 27F256.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Color photograph of the i386 microprocessor package. Clock speeds: 16 MHz (5 to 6 MIPS) 20 MHz introduced February 16, 1987 (6 to 7 MIPS) 25 MHz introduced April 4, 1988 (8.5 MIPS) 33 MHz introduced April 10, 1989 (11.4 MIPS, 9.4 SPECint92 on...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Microprocessor packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the i486 microprocessor package. Clock speeds: 25 MHz (20 MIPS, 16.8. Number of transistors: 1,200,000 (1 micron, with 50 MHz at .8 micron). Bus width: 32 bits. Addressable memory: 4 gigabytes. Virtual...
Electronic industries; Memory chip packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Color slide of the Intel 1103 Memory chip package. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. This first DRAM is also the first of the chips that would enable the explosive growth of PC's; 1970 MIL became the official second source supplier for Intels...
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.
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Memory chip packages; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Color slide of the Intel 2716 Memory chip package. Intel Corporation's Components Division had announced the industry's densest and easiest to use ultra-violet-erasable programmable read only memory, the 16,384 bit 2716 with a single +5 volt supply.
Electronic industries; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® 1101 RAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: Joel Karp. Project management: Les Vadasz. First RAM; developed to replace the core memory; among the competing MOS-, bipolar- and...
Electronic industries; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Semiconductor wafers; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1103 DRAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. This first DRAM is also the first of the chips that would enable the explosive growth of PC's; 1970 MIL became the official second source supplier...
Electronic industries; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1601A Memory Die. Fabricated with silicon gate technology; 256 word by 8 bit electrically programmable ROM suited for uses where fast turnaround and pattern experimentation were important such as in...
Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Memory dies; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® 1702A Memory Die. Invented by Dov Frohman, the 1702 was the first easily erasable storage medium. Intel's 1702 EPROM gave OEM's a flexible low-cost way to store microprocessor programs.