Intel Marks 30th Anniversary Of The Microprocessor
From the Bathroom Scale to the Powerful PC,
Your House
is Home to More Than 40 “Chips”
AUCKLAND, November 21, 2001 Movie-goers in 1968 were amazed and enthralled by “HAL,” the powerful computer in the science fiction classic “2001: A Space Odyssey.” Even with that fantastic preview into the future, personal computers and the Internet were inconceivable.
Not long after the movie was released, Intel engineer Ted Hoff developed a general-purpose logic device for a Japanese manufacturer of calculators. The device became known as the Intel 4004 microprocessor and its 1971 introduction would eventually pave the way for the personal computer and a new way of life for people worldwide.
With 2,300 transistors on an area smaller than a fingernail, the Intel 4004 microprocessor packed as much computing power as the ENIAC*, the first electronic computer that was so large it filled a room when it was built in 1946.
Early uses for the Intel 4004 microprocessor included down-to-earth applications such as automatic traffic light controllers and blood analyzers. It also provided the brainpower for NASA’s Pioneer 10 Deep Space Probe*.
Much has changed since the 4004
microprocessor was introduced. Today’s average household is
home to more than 40 microprocessors, also called “chips.”
You can find these technological marvels in bathroom scales
with digital readouts, irons with automatic shutoff
switches, the common electric toothbrush and of course, the
powerful home PC.
Today’s microprocessors have also
grown exponentially in computing power. The state-of-the-art
Intel® Pentium® 4 processor operates at two billion cycles
per second and is approximately 18,000 times more powerful
than the 4004 microprocessor. Moreover, Pentium 4
processor-based computers are fueling the latest trends in
home computing, including digital video, audio, photography,
communications, 3D graphics and games.
About Intel
Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is also a leading
manufacturer of computer, networking and communications
products. Additional information about Intel is available at
www.intel.co.nz
Intel and Pentium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.
* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.