Tuesday, 19 July 2011

How Microprocessors Work

The computer you are using to read this page
uses a microprocessor to do its work. The microprocessor is the heart of any
normal computer, whether it is a desktop machine, a server or a laptop. The
microprocessor you are using might be a Pentium, a K6, a PowerPC, a Sparc or
any of the many other brands and types of microprocessors, but they all do
approximately the same thing in approximately the same way.
A microprocessor -- also known as a CPU or central
processing unit -- is a complete computation engine that is fabricated on a
single chip. The first microprocessor was the Intel 4004, introduced in
1971. The 4004 was not very powerful -- all it could do was add and
subtract, and it could only do that 4 bits at a time. But it was amazing
that everything was on one chip. Prior to the 4004, engineers built
computers either from collections of chips or from discrete components
(transistors wired one at a time). The 4004 powered one of the first
portable electronic calculators.

 


If you have ever wondered what the microprocessor in your computer is doing,
or if you have ever wondered about the differences between types of
microprocessors, then read on. In this article, you will learn how fairly
simple digital logic techniques allow a computer to do its job, whether its
playing a game or spell checking a document!

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