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The third x86 generation of x86 microprocessors, Intel 80386 (i386) was a 32-bit microprocessor backwards compatible with previous generations of 80x86 CPUs.
The Intel 80386 was produced at speeds up to 33 MHz, AMD produced even faster 40 MHz version.
The 80386SX processors were manufactured in 100-pin package, or 32 pins less than the number of pins on DX package.
The x86 architecture first appeared inside the Intel 8086 CPU in 1978; the 8086 was a development of the Intel 8080 processor (which itself followed the 4004 and 8008), and programs in 8080 assembler language could be mechanically translated to equivalent programs in 8086 assembler language.
An exception to this design is the Intel80386SX, which is 32-bit with 24-bit addressing and a 16-bit data bus.
The Intel 80387 math co-processor was integrated into the next CPU in the series, the Intel 80486 (the 486SX, sold as a budget processor, had its co-processor disabled or removed).