eagle1109
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haha, oh yeah I really meant something like a year or couple years at mostbefore solid-state electronics was developed in the 50's (I suppose to you that's a "long time ago" but not to me) .
cmos logic gates - and TTL / RTL were state of the art before uP's
cmos was the breakthru that allowed the 4004 and all the others - no BJT's in uP, hardly ever ...
TMS 1000 series[edit]
The die of a TMS1000
The later TMS 1000 series went on the market in 1974. TI stressed the 4-bit TMS 1000 for use in pre-programmed embedded applications.
A computer-on-a-chip combines the microprocessor core (CPU), memory, and I/O (input/output) lines onto one chip. The computer-on-a-chip patent, called the "microcomputer patent" at the time, U.S. Patent 4,074,351, was awarded to Gary Boone and Michael J. Cochran of TI. Aside from this patent, the standard meaning of microcomputer is a computer using one or more microprocessors as its CPU(s), while the concept defined in the patent is more akin to a microcontroller.
Partly in response to the existence of the single-chip TMS 1000, Intel developed a computer system on a chip optimized for control applications, the Intel 8048, with commercial parts first shipping in 1977. It combined RAM and ROM on the same chip with a microprocessor. Among numerous applications, this chip would eventually find its way into over one billion PC keyboards. At that time Intel's President, Luke J. Valenter, stated that the microcontroller was one of the most successful products in the company's history, and he expanded the microcontroller division's budget by over 25%.
There were some high-speed (for the time) bit-slice processors that were fabricated using bipolar ECL circuits.cmos was the breakthru that allowed the 4004 and all the others - no BJT's in uP, hardly ever ..
The difference between a microcontroller and a microprocessor is more one of where they are used, rather than basic designSo does "computer-on-a-chip" or "system on chip" means it's a microcontroller ?
I think the answer to the question though, is that prior to the large scale integration on silicon, smaller scale was used. I remember computer monitors with 100+ TTL, ECL and DTL ICs on large PCBs and usually a mass of wires soldered to the back to fix the design bugs, even on production models. Then came bit-slice processors, a mix of TTL and what we now call PLDs, they made things far faster and the architectures of modern systems came into being. Then LSI like the devices mentioned earlier arrived and finally, the integration of the peripherals and core processor to make a microcontroller.
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