Rockwell PPS-4
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Rockwell PPS-4 found in the PC-1001 programmable calculator. PPS-4 (part 10660) on the upper-right corner along with the 10706 clock generator, GP I/O 10696, ROM (A05xx), RAM (10432), and a 7400 series 74154 decoder.
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Developer |
Rockwell International
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Manufacturer |
Rockwell International
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Production |
August, 1972-1981
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Architecture |
4-bit words, 8-bit instruction
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Word size |
4-bit "-bit" is not declared as a valid unit of measurement for this property.
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Technology |
pMOS
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Clock |
40 kHz-256 kHz
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Package |
QIL42
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The PPS-4 (Parallel Processing System - 4-bit word) was a family of 4-bit microprocessor chips designed by Rockwell International and introduce in 3rd quarter of 1972.
The original PPS-4 chipset was designed to provide complete functionality in three chips - CPU, program memory, and a clock generator. A later version known as the PPS-4/2 ("/2" denoting a two-chip system) eliminated the external clock generator chip by incorporating it internally. A third variation known as the PPS-4/1 ("/1" being a single-chip microcomputer) was actually a microcontroller, including the program memory internally.
History
Members
2nd source
National semiconductor later became a second source for the PPS-4.
Applications
While not as known as the other chips like the MCS-4, the PPS-4 certainly never received as much mainstream exposure. Nevertheless, it did find its way into many industrial and consumer products such as toys, desktop calculators, games, and other electronic appliances.
Design
Instruction set
Documents