-
WikiChip
WikiChip
-
Architectures
Popular x86
-
Intel
- Client
- Server
- Big Cores
- Small Cores
-
AMD
Popular ARM
-
ARM
- Server
- Big
- Little
-
Cavium
-
Samsung
-
-
Chips
Popular Families
-
Ampere
-
Apple
-
Cavium
-
HiSilicon
-
MediaTek
-
NXP
-
Qualcomm
-
Renesas
-
Samsung
-
From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "1-bit architecture"
(→Applications) |
(→1-bit microprocessors) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
== 1-bit microprocessors == | == 1-bit microprocessors == | ||
− | * | + | * {{motorola|MC14500|Motorola MC14500}} |
* [[General Instrument SBA]] | * [[General Instrument SBA]] | ||
* [[General Instrument SBA-1]] | * [[General Instrument SBA-1]] |
Revision as of 03:29, 21 January 2016
The 1-bit architecture is a microprocessor or computer architecture that has a datapath width or a highest operand width of 1 bit. These architectures typically have a matching register file with registers width of 1 bit. Very few 1-bit architecture CPUs were commercially marketed.
Applications
Some of the earliest calculators had bit-serial architecture, 1-bit was always seen as obsolete even in the early 1970s. Most bit-serial applications quickly switched over to 4/8-bit and then 16-bit microprocessors. Today all 1-bit microprocessors are largely obsolete, even academia.