From WikiChip
PIC - General Instrument
< general instrument
Revision as of 02:51, 18 January 2016 by ChipIt (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{gi title|PIC}} {{ic family | title = GI PIC | image = <!-- Image representation of the IC family, e.g. "MCS-4.jpg" --> | caption = <!-- d...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

GI PIC
no photo (ic).svg
Developer General Instrument
Manufacturer General Instrument
Production 1976-1987
Architecture 8-bit, Harvard architecture
Word size 8-bit
"-bit" is not declared as a valid unit of measurement for this property.
Technology NMOS
"NMOS" is not in the list (BiCMOS, CMOS, Static CMOS, Dynamic CMOS, nMOS, pMOS, Bipolar, ECL, Schottky TTL, Schottky transistor, ...) of allowed values for the "technology" property.
Clock 200 kHz-1 MHz
Package DIP18, DIP28, DIP40, DIP64

The GI PIC Series (Programmable Intelligent Computer Series) was a family of 8-bit microcontrollers first introduce in 1976 by General Instrument. This family is the is the direct ancestor of the modern Michochip PIC family.

History

Members

Part I/O Ports ROM Notes
PIC1645 12 256x12 bit
PIC1650 32 512x12 bit
PIC1655 20 512x12 bit
PIC1656 20 512x12 bit Interrupt support
PIC1664 32 512x12 bit Sample/development chip
PIC1670 32 1024x12 bit

Design

New text document.svg This section is empty; you can help add the missing info by editing this page.

See also

designerGeneral Instrument +
full page namegeneral instrument/pic +
instance ofintegrated circuit family +
main designerGeneral Instrument +
manufacturerGeneral Instrument +
nameGI PIC +
packageDIP18 +, DIP28 +, DIP40 + and DIP64 +