The first microprocessor was the Intel 4004.
Harvardvon NeumannGeneral Purpose ProcessorDigital Signal ProcessorFixed Point/IntegerFloating PointScientificBusinessBinaryDecimalFixed word lengthVariable word lengthetc. Depends on your definition of types.
The general purpose of speaking is communication.
ENIAC, in in 1946
Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer, was the first general-purpose electronic computer.
4004
4004
b/c the 8085 microprocessor is the first 8 bit microprocessor which Intel is produces in 1877 and this is the first general purpose 8 bit microprocessor. there was an 8 bit general purpose register before 8085 named as 8008 but this microprocessor is not functional 8 bit microprocessor
6 general purpose registers.i.e., B,C,D,E,H,L
Microprocessor consists of different types of registers. They special purpose registers, general purpose registers, address registers, floating point registers and constant registers.
to initialise the chip in microprocessor....that is for which purpose we are going to use it......
The first microprocessor was the Intel 4004.
Harvardvon NeumannGeneral Purpose ProcessorDigital Signal ProcessorFixed Point/IntegerFloating PointScientificBusinessBinaryDecimalFixed word lengthVariable word lengthetc. Depends on your definition of types.
Most modern cell phones contain two different computers and a microwave transmitter/receiver. The first computer uses a standard general purpose microprocessor for general data handling and call management purposes, the second computer uses a special purpose microprocessor called a digital signal processor (DSP) for handling voice processing and often photo compression/decompression processing. Of course there is also a battery, display, and touch sensor array.
•It was the first general-purpose electronic computer.
No. An 80487 would have been a math coprocessor for an 80486 general-purpose microprocessor...just like the 8087 was the math coprocessor for the 8086 and 8088, the 80287 for the 80286, and the 80387 was for the 80386. The 80486 was the first Intel processor to contain an on-chip math coprocessor, so there wouldn't have been an 80487 because it wasn't necessary.
The Intel 4004 was the world's first microprocessor. It was designed in 1970.