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[[Category:novix microprocessors]]
 
[[Category:novix microprocessors]]

Revision as of 03:26, 31 December 2013

Novix NC4016
IC placeholder.png

Developer Novix

Introduction date June 1985[1]

Model NC4016

Transistors 16,000[2]

Cores 1

Clock 7.5 MHz

Bus Width 16-bit

Lithography 3 μm

Memory Specs
Max Memory 0

Packaging
Package 121-pin PGA

The Novix NC4016 was a 16-bit, stack machine microprocessor designed by Novix Inc in 1985 primarily for the Forth programming language. The NC4016 directly executes the primitives of the high-level Forth programming language. The NC4016 was capable of executing typical Forth programs as much as 20 times faster than the Motorola 68000. Novix also offered the NC4000 Small C Compiler which was compatible with the NC4016 microprocessor.

In 1988, the NC4016 design was licensed and improved by Harris Semiconductor which later rebranded the chip as the RTX2000, a radiation hardened version suitable for spacecrafts use.

The NC4016 was later replaced by the NC5016 and later by the NC6016.

History

In 1983 Charles H. Moore founded Novix, Inc, a company with the goal of designing a microprocessor that would execute FORTH programs optimally. The chip, which was originally named NC4000, was released as the NC4016 in June of 1985. The NC4016 was a completely stack machine. The opcodes manipulated the stack directly.

The microprocessor, which was fabricated using 3 μm HCMOS process technology, has a 7.5MHz clock capable of 10MIPS.

Implementation

Due to the limitations in the gate array technology of the time, the chip did not have any on-chip memory. Three separate modules were required: for the return stack, data stack, and program and data stack.

References

External links