The Intel 80486.
80-48 6ds
The Intel 80486DX is a 32-bit processor that was released by Intel in 1989. It was the first to include its own floating point unit on the same die. 80486SXs are different in that they have this component disabled to make the processor cheaper.
Not sure if it's the first but:"Intel processors later than the 80486 integrated floating-point hardware on the main processor chip" source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coprocessor#Modern_PC_coprocessorsCouldn't find anything about Motorola processors with math coprocessors built-in.I believe AMD was just behind Intel with the processor design.
Robert Noyce invented the first integrated circuit chip later on in his time he created two companies one being Intel
If you are thinking of the Jack Kilby integrated circuit (see image above) of 1958, it was only a one transistor analog sine wave oscillator - not all parts of a computer!It was not until 1971 that Intel put a complete 4 bit CPU (the Intel 4004) on an integrated circuit - but not all parts of a computer.One of the first integrated circuits to actually put all parts of a computer on one integrated circuit was the Intel 8048 microcontroller in 1976.
SSE was first used with the Intel Pentium 3 III.
1958, but the germanium based process was difficult and expensive to use, requiring all the components in the IC be interconnected by hand under a microscope. It took another year or so for the silicon based planar process to be used, which allowed all components and interconnects to be made using photolithography.
The Intel 4004 introduced in 1970 and was the first processor introduced by Intel.
Intel's first microproceesor was 4004..
The first microprocessor (that is a CPU completely integrated on one die) was the 4004. It was released by Intel in 1971. These chips were capable of 92000 instructions per second at a clock speed of up to 740kHz.
The first intel processor introduced in 1973 called is Intel 8008
The Intel 4004 was the world's first microprocessor. It was designed in 1970.