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Motorola and 68060
Later designs feature the Motorola 68040 and Motorola 68060.
By the time the 68060 was in production, Motorola had abandoned development of the 680x0-type chips in favor of the PowerPC.
The 68060 was the last 680x0-type processor from Motorola.
Motorola MVME-17x and Force Computer SYS68K VMEbus systems also used a 68060 CPU.
The P5 Pentium competitors included the Motorola 68060 and the PowerPC 601 as well as the SPARC, MIPS, and Alpha microprocessor families, most of which also used a superscalar in-order dual instruction pipeline configuration at some time.
** Motorola 68060
For any number of reasons, likely that the 68060 was in development, that the Intel 80486 wasn't progressing as quickly as Motorola assumed it would, and that 68060 was a demanding project, the 68050 was cancelled early in development.
There is also no revision of the 68060, as Motorola was in the process of shifting away from the 68000 and 88k processor lines into its new PowerPC business, so the 68070 was never developed.
Motorola mainly used even numbers for major revisions to the CPU core such as 68000, 68020, 68040 and 68060.
# REDIRECT Motorola 68060
Motorola 68060
Some of them overclock the CPU and / or the bus, while others upgrade the CPU to a Motorola 68060.
* Motorola 68060 microprocessor

Motorola and is
See, e. g., Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States, ( giving federal courts the authority to fashion common law rules with respect to issues of federal power, in this case negotiable instruments backed by the federal government ); see also International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U. S. 215 ( 1918 ) ( creating a cause of action for misappropriation of " hot news " that lacks any statutory grounding, but that is one of the handful of federal common law actions that survives today ); National Basketball Association v. Motorola, Inc., 105 F. 3d 841, 843-44, 853 ( 2d Cir.
The Dragon is built around the Motorola MC6809E processor running at 0. 89 MHz.
Motorola / Freescale Semiconductor's DragonBall, or MC68328, is a microcontroller design based on the famous 68000 core, but implemented as an all-in-one low-power solution for handheld computer use.
The first field is either the Motorola 68000 exception number that occurred ( if a CPU error occurs ) or an internal error identifier ( such as an ' Out of Memory ' code ), in case of a system software error.
The 6309 is Hitachi's CMOS version of the Motorola 6809 microprocessor.
The Motorola 68000 is a 16 / 32-bit CISC microprocessor core designed and marketed by Freescale Semiconductor ( formerly Motorola Semiconductor Products Sector ).
Tom Gunter, retired Corporate Vice President at Motorola, is known as the " Father of the 68000.
Motorola ceased production of the HMOS MC68000 and MC68008 in 1996, but its spin-off company, Freescale Semiconductor, is still producing the MC68HC000, MC68HC001, MC68EC000, and MC68SEC000, as well as the MC68302 and MC68306 microcontrollers and later versions of the DragonBall family.
The Motorola 68020 is a 32-bit microprocessor from Motorola, released in 1984.
It is the successor to the Motorola 68010 and is succeeded by the Motorola 68030.
In keeping with naming practices common to Motorola designs, the 68020 is usually referred to as the ' 020, pronounced oh-two-oh or oh-twenty ".
The 68EC020 is a microprocessor from Motorola.
It is a lower cost version of the Motorola 68020.
Motorola Solutions is generally considered to be the direct successor to Motorola, Inc., as the reorganization was structured with Motorola Mobility being spun off.
The Motorola 68030 is a 32-bit microprocessor in Motorola's 68000 family.
In keeping with general Motorola naming, this CPU is often referred to as the 030 ( pronounced oh-three-oh or oh-thirty ).
A Motorola 68040 microprocessorDie of a Motorola 68040The Motorola 68040 is a microprocessor from Motorola, released in 1990.

Motorola and 32-bit
Early CPU accelerator cards feature full 32-bit CPUs of the 68000 family such as the Motorola 68020 and Motorola 68030, almost always with 32-bit memory and usually with FPUs and MMUs or the facility to add them.
The " ST " officially stands for " Sixteen / Thirty-two ", which referred to the Motorola 68000's 16-bit external bus and 32-bit internals.
It was an attempt to draw attention from the less-delayed 16 and 32-bit processors of other manufacturers ( such as Motorola, Zilog, and National Semiconductor ) and at the same time to counter the threat from the Zilog Z80 ( designed by former Intel employees ), which became very successful.
The decision to leapfrog the competition and introduce a hybrid 16 / 32-bit design was necessary, and Motorola turned it into a coherent mission.
Newer microprocessor chips such as the Motorola 68000 ( 1979 ) and Intel 80386 ( 1985 ) also included 32-bit logical addressing.
One of them was the HP Series 300 of Motorola 68000-based workstations, another Series 200 line of technical workstations based on a custom silicon on sapphire ( SOS ) chip design, the SOS based 16-bit HP 3000 classic series and finally the HP 9000 Series 500 minicomputers, based on their own ( 16 and 32-bit ) FOCUS microprocessor.
The 32016 was also very similar to the Motorola 68000, which also used 32-bit internals with a 16-bit data bus and 24-bit address bus.
Implementations of the original 32-bit SPARC architecture were initially designed and used in Sun's Sun-4 workstation and server systems, replacing their earlier Sun-3 systems based on the Motorola 68000 family of processors.
The Motorola MC68010 processor is a 16 / 32-bit microprocessor from Motorola, released in 1982.
The 32-bit EPOC developed by Project Protea resulted in the eventual formation of Symbian Ltd. in June 1998 in conjunction with Nokia, Ericsson and Motorola.
The TI-89 runs on a 32-bit microprocessor, the Motorola 68000, which nominally runs at 10, 12, or 16 MHz, depending on the calculator's hardware version.
QuickBASIC could also be run on System 7, as long as 32-bit addressing was disabled ; this was not possible on Motorola 68040-based Macintosh machines.
The Motorola 680x0 / m68000 / 68000 is a family of 32-bit CISC microprocessors.
In the early 1980s, with the advent of 32-bit microprocessors such as the Motorola 68000, a number of new participants in this field appeared, including Apollo Computer and Sun Microsystems, who created Unix-based workstations based on this processor.

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