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You can address 214 or 16384 different locations with 14 address lines.
2^14 memory locations. In general for n-bit address bus, its 2^n
2^14 memory locations. In general for n-bit address bus, its 2^n
A microprocessor with 12 address lines is capable of addressing 4096 locations in memory. The Intel 4004 and the DEC PDP-8 are examples of processors with 12 address lines.
Different microprocessor can address different amounts of memory. The motherboard design should allow for maximising the physical memory to what the microprocessor can address
The 8085 can address 216, or 65536 different memory locations.
As far I know...Intel 8085 isz One address microprocessor.
Microprocessor has 16 address lines and microcontroller has 20 address lines
32 bit address line can access 4GB of memory. As 2^10 -> 1KB; 2^20 -> 2MB; 2^30 -> 1GB and so on.... 32 bit gives (2^30) * (2^2) = 1GB * 4 = 4GB;
There is no microprocessor with !t of address memory, only virtual memory. the firt one was the 80486.
The 8086/8088 microprocessor has a 20 bit address bus, so the number of memory locations it can address is 220 or 1,048,576.
A microprocessor that uses 24 bit addressing, such as the Intel 80286, can address 224 or 16,777,216 memory locations. The IBM MainFrame, 360/44 or any modern version running in AMODE=24 also has the same capacity.