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  • The Intel 4004 is a 4-bit central processing unit considered to be the first commercially available microprocessor.

  • A microprocessor is a single integrated circuit (or computer chip)

  • that merges all the CPU functions of a computer into a single component.

  • Microprocessors are the heart of modern computers. Theyre programmable, meaning they can be

  • given instructions and return results based on those instructions.

  • Before their invention, multiple chips were required to do the same thing, often spread

  • across numerous racks.

  • Before the 4004, Intel was a memory chip company.

  • In late 1969, the Nippon Calculating Machine Corporation, also known as Busicom, contracted

  • Intel to create a dozen custom chips for use in their Busicom 141-PF digital calculator.

  • Intel didn’t have the manpower to complete the contract as written. That forced Federico

  • Faggin and his team to think smarter, and came up with a single chip general purpose

  • design that could do the work of all twelve. The resulting 2,300 transistor chip had as

  • much processing power as the room-filling ENIAC.

  • In contrast to today’s multi-gigahertz CPU’s, the 4004 ran at a modest 740 khz.

  • The 4004 was only one part of the MCS-4 chipset. The 4001 was a required 256 byte ROM.

  • The 4002 provided an optional 40 bytes of RAM.

  • The 4003 was a shift register for I/O functions,

  • also optional.

  • Intel wisely bought out the rights from the soon-to-be-bankrupt Busicom and decided to

  • sell the powerful chips commercially.

  • The 4004 debuted with a price tag of $60 in November of 1971, though rumor has it there

  • were sales as early as March of that year.

  • While the Intel 4004 had an important part in computer history, it isn’t the first

  • microprocessor.

  • That honor goes to the MP-944, part of the Central Air Data Computer found inside the

  • F-14 Tomcat. Moreover, the design for the TI TMS 1000 microprocessor was actually completed

  • before the Intel 4004, but Texas Instruments didn’t sell it to the public until 1974.

  • The Intel 4004 would eventually be succeeded by the Intel 4040, 8008, 8080, and onward

  • to the 8086, leading to the famous x86 microprocessor family that powers most desktop computers

  • to this day.

  • During the 35th anniversary of the 4004 in 2006, Intel celebrated by releasing a wealth

  • of technical information to mark the occasion, including mask works, schematics, and other

  • documentation.

  • If you’d like to find out more about the Intel 4004, check the links in the description.

  • If you found this informative and want to know more random things in three minute bites,

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The Intel 4004 is a 4-bit central processing unit considered to be the first commercially available microprocessor.

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