Home > Computers > Hardware > Components > Processors > 68k
The term 68k means the Motorola 68000 series processors. Some variants: 68000, 68010, 68020, 68030, 68040, 68060; CPU32 (68330), 68360 (QUICC), ColdFire, DragonBall. These were and are used in many: Personal computers: Apple Macintosh, Commodore Amiga, Atari ST, early HP 9000s; Workstations: Sun Microsystems Unix, Apollo/Domain. Video games: Sega Genesis/MegaDrive, NeoGeo, several arcade machines. Many versions are in production, as embedded processors.
http://www.cpu-collection.de/?tn=1&l0=cl&l1=68000
Information, photos of many 68k chips, including second source makers. [cpu-collection.de]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/68k
Growing article, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia]
http://www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/site/homepage.jsp?nodeId=0162468rH3YTLC
Makes and sells 68k processors. Includes, varied information: documents, datasheets, product selector, tools, design, fora, FAQs, success stories, links. [Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.]
http://sca.uwaterloo.ca/coldfire/gcc-doc/docs.htm
Source code for a GCC variant, with optimizations, bug fixes for Freescale Semiconductor (Motorola) variable length RISC 68K series processors; information on how to use GNU C, RTEMS, and other free tools for embedded development.
http://www.esacademy.com/automation/faq/m68k/
Information on many 68k members.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_68000
Growing article, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia]
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