FACTOID # 147: France is the top destination in the world for tourists, accounting for 11 percent of all tourist arrivals worldwide.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


The 88000 (m88k for short) is a microprocessor design produced by Motorola. It was their attempt at a home-grown RISC (now often referred to as a load-store) architecture, started in the 1980s. Originally called the 78000 as a homage to their famed 68000 series, the design went though a tortured development path, including the name change, before finally emerging in April 1988. This was some two years after its competition in the form of the SPARC and MIPS, and the 88000 never managed to catch on.


Like the 68000 before it, the 88000 was considered to be a very "clean" design. It was a pure 32-bit system, using a true Harvard architecture with completely separate data and address buses (and caches), had a small but powerful command set, and –like all Motorola CPUs– did not use memory segmentation.


The first implementation of the 88000 design was in the 88100 CPU, which included an integrated FPU. Mated to this was the 88200 MMU and cache controller. Building a system out of this 1st generation 88000 required both chips and considerable wiring between them, driving up costs. This is likely another major reason for the 88000's limited success.


This was later addressed in the 88110, which combined the two chips into a single package. An additional modification made at the behest of MIT's *T project which resulted in the 88110MP, including on-chip communications for use in multi-processor systems.


Motorola released a series of motherboards for making "out of the box" systems based on the 88000, known as the MVME series, as well as the interesting Series 900 stackable computers. Unlike tower or rack mount systems, the Series 900 sat on top of each other and connected to one another with bus-like cabling. The concept never caught on.


In the late 1980s several companies were actively watching the 88000 for future use, including NeXT and Apple Computer, but both gave up by the time the 88110 was available in 1990. The only widespread 3rd party use would be in the Data General AViiON series, but they were one of the only remaining customers in 1995 when DG went all-Intel. The only other major use was in the Japanese 4-processor OMRON luna88k machines, which were used for a short time on the Mach kernel project at Carnegie Mellon University. A number of smaller systems were also built, but none are widely known.


There was also an attempt to popularize the system with the 88open group, similar to what Sun Microsystems was attempting with their SPARC design. It appears to have failed in any practical sense.


In the early 1990s Motorola joined the AIM effort to create a new RISC design based on the IBM POWER design. They worked a few features of the 88000 into the new PowerPC design to offer their customer base some sort of upgrade path. At that point the 88000 was dumped as soon as possible.


External links

  • The m88k Resource (http://badabada.org/index.html)


List of Motorola microprocessors

6800 | 6809 | Hitachi 6309 | 68000 | 68008 | 68010 | 68012 | 68020 | 68030 | 68040 | 68060 | 88000 | Dragonball | Coldfire | PowerPC | PowerPC G3 | PowerPC G4


  Results from FactBites:
 
Motorola PowerPC deal with Ford raises questions on 88K RISC fate - Motorola's 88000 reduced instruction set computer ... (789 words)
Rather than turning to work done for the 88K, Motorola plans to re-use peripheral cells originally developed for the 68300 CPU, and is also starting development work of flash memory cells for use on PowerPC circuits.
When the 88K win was disclosed, Ford was expected to buy as many as 90 million circuits over approximately 15 years.
Wilkie and other Motorola executives stopped short of saying PowerPC would replace the 88K in all future design considerations, and Tom Mace, president and CEO of 88open, said future 88K iterations are "in discussion and design activities." Nevertheless, he confirmed a restructuring at the consortium while indicating its budget has been cut.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m