Motorola 6800

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Motorola 6800 Microprocessor
The 6800 is a microprocessor produced by Motorola and released shortly after the Intel 8080 in 1975. It had 78 instructions, including the (in)famous, undocumented Halt and Catch Fire (HCF) bus test instruction. It may have been the first µP with an index register.

It was usually packaged in a 40 pin DIP (dual-inline package).

Several first-generation microcomputers of the 1970s, available by mail order as kits or in assembled form, used the 6800 as their CPU; examples are the SWTPC 6800 (the first computer to use the 6800) and the MITS Altair 680 range (MITS offering these as alternatives to its Altair 8800).

The 6800 'fathered' several descendants, the pinnacle being the greatly upgraded 6809, which was used in the Vectrex video game console and the TRS-80 Color Computer, among others. There are also many microcontrollers descended from the 6800 architecture, such as the 6805, 6807, 6808, 68HC11 and 68HC12. Competitor MOS Technology cloned and upgraded the 6800 with its 6502 and successors, used in many computers and game consoles during the late 1970s and early-to-mid-1980s (most notably the Atari 2600, Apple II, and the Commodore PET, VIC-20 and C64).

External links


List of Motorola microprocessors

The 6800 family | 6809 (see also: Hitachi 6309) | 68000 family: 68000 | 68008 | 68010 | 68012 | 68020 | 68030 | 68040 | 68060 | Coldfire | Dragonball | Pre-PPC RISC: 88000 | Floating-point processors: 68881 | 68882
PowerPC family (as part of AIM): PPC 7XX range (aka "PowerPC G3") | PPC 7XXX range (aka "PowerPC G4")


This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.
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