Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 4004 microprocessor. The 4004 was Intel's first microprocessor. This breakthrough invention powered the Busicom calculator and paved the way for embedding intelligence in inanimate objects as well as the personal computer. 108 KHz, 50 KIPs , 2300 10m transistors
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1601A Memory Die. Fabricated with silicon gate technology; 2...
Color slide of the Intel 1103 Memory chip package. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. This first ...
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® 1101 RAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: J...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 4004 microprocessor package. Clock speed: 108 kilohertz. Tr...
Black-and-white photograph of Busicom calculator. A Japanese calculator manufacturer, Busicom, asked...
Black-and-white photograph of Ted Hoff with 8080 chip. Asked to design a custom, multi-chip calculat...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8008 microprocessor. The 8008 was twice as powerful as the 4...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor. The processor debuted with 42 million ...
Enlarged color photograph of the 3101 64-Bit Schottky Bipolar RAM Die. Intel's first successful prod...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor packages. Level Two cache: 256 KB Advan...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8086 microprocessor. Chalk the 8086 design up to Intel’s com...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1103 DRAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. ...
The world is full of microprocessors and microprocessors are full of devices. From the high-end stor...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® processor. The Intel® Pentium® processor allowed co...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8088 processor. A pivotal sale to IBM's new personal compute...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1601A Memory Die. Fabricated with silicon gate technology; 2...
Color slide of the Intel 1103 Memory chip package. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. This first ...
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® 1101 RAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: J...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 4004 microprocessor package. Clock speed: 108 kilohertz. Tr...
Black-and-white photograph of Busicom calculator. A Japanese calculator manufacturer, Busicom, asked...
Black-and-white photograph of Ted Hoff with 8080 chip. Asked to design a custom, multi-chip calculat...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8008 microprocessor. The 8008 was twice as powerful as the 4...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor. The processor debuted with 42 million ...
Enlarged color photograph of the 3101 64-Bit Schottky Bipolar RAM Die. Intel's first successful prod...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor packages. Level Two cache: 256 KB Advan...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8086 microprocessor. Chalk the 8086 design up to Intel’s com...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1103 DRAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. ...
The world is full of microprocessors and microprocessors are full of devices. From the high-end stor...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® Pentium® processor. The Intel® Pentium® processor allowed co...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 8088 processor. A pivotal sale to IBM's new personal compute...
Enlarged color photograph of the Intel® 1601A Memory Die. Fabricated with silicon gate technology; 2...
Color slide of the Intel 1103 Memory chip package. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: John Reed. This first ...
Enlarged black-and-white photograph of the Intel® 1101 RAM Memory Die. Concept: Ted Hoff. Design: J...