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Некако најголем мерак ми прават процесорите па ке почнам со нив
Ноември 1971, Компанија наречена Интел го претстави на светот првиот единечен микропроцесор,Тоа беше Интел-овиот 4004.Тој беше создаден од компјутерските инжинери Федерико Фагин, Тед Хоф и Стен Мазор. Интеловиот чип 4004 го искористи сите делови кои направија компјутерот да може да мисли,Програмската интелегенција стана возможна.
Малце поопширно во оригинален фонт.
[SIZE=-1]The 4004 was the world's first universal microprocessor. In the late 1960s, many scientists had discussed the possibility of a computer on a chip, but nearly everyone felt that integrated circuit technology was not yet ready to support such a chip. Intel's Ted Hoff felt differently; he was the first person to recognize that the new silicon-gated MOS technology might make a single-chip CPU (central processing unit) possible.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Hoff and the Intel team developed such an architecture with just over 2,300 transistors in an area of only 3 by 4 millimetres. With its 4-bit CPU, command register, decoder, decoding control, control monitoring of machine commands and interim register, the 4004 was one heck of a little invention. Today's 64-bit microprocessors are still based on similar designs, and the microprocessor is still the most complex mass-produced product ever with more than 5.5 million transistors performing hundreds of millions of calculations each second - numbers that are sure to be outdated fast.
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Ноември 1971, Компанија наречена Интел го претстави на светот првиот единечен микропроцесор,Тоа беше Интел-овиот 4004.Тој беше создаден од компјутерските инжинери Федерико Фагин, Тед Хоф и Стен Мазор. Интеловиот чип 4004 го искористи сите делови кои направија компјутерот да може да мисли,Програмската интелегенција стана возможна.
Малце поопширно во оригинален фонт.
[SIZE=-1]The 4004 was the world's first universal microprocessor. In the late 1960s, many scientists had discussed the possibility of a computer on a chip, but nearly everyone felt that integrated circuit technology was not yet ready to support such a chip. Intel's Ted Hoff felt differently; he was the first person to recognize that the new silicon-gated MOS technology might make a single-chip CPU (central processing unit) possible.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Hoff and the Intel team developed such an architecture with just over 2,300 transistors in an area of only 3 by 4 millimetres. With its 4-bit CPU, command register, decoder, decoding control, control monitoring of machine commands and interim register, the 4004 was one heck of a little invention. Today's 64-bit microprocessors are still based on similar designs, and the microprocessor is still the most complex mass-produced product ever with more than 5.5 million transistors performing hundreds of millions of calculations each second - numbers that are sure to be outdated fast.
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