8088 processor? Get yourself some fresh gear. Cripe's sake.
Lanny V. Dao has written: 'Mastering the 8088 microprocessor' -- subject(s): Intel 8088 (Microprocessor)
Intel in 1979
The 8086/8088 is a 16 bit computer running on a 20 bit address bus. Processes use a segmented memory architecture to access one of four 64kb memory segments from a physical space of 1mb.
Yu-cheng Liu has written: 'Microcomputer systems' -- subject(s): Intel 8086 (Microprocessor), Intel 8088 (Microprocessor), Intel 8086 (Microprocesseur), Mikroprozessor 8086, Microcomputers, Mikroprozessor 8088, Intel 8088 (Microprocesseur)
The 8088 was a 16 bit microprocessor implemented on an 8 bit databus.
the pin configuration of a processor means that the diagramatic representation of block diagram of processor representing various pins and the function of that pins
Which microprocessor accepts the program written for 8086 without any changes?
The 8086/8088 microprocessor family is a 16 bit microprocessor. The 8086 implementation also has a 16 bit data bus, but the 8088 implementation has an 8 bit data bus, comparable to the 8085. The 8088 implementation was intended as a logical upgrade from the 8085, while keeping the complexity of the system on an equal footing as the 8085.
The 4004 was Intel's first microprocessor and the world's first single chip microprocessor. For the first PC as we know it (the 1981 IBM PC), it was the 8088, following with 80286, 80386, 80486 and then the Pentium line.
The 8085 was replaced with the 8086/8088. As such, there is no 16 bit version of the 8085.
There are 256 different interrupt vectors in the 8086/8088. Each vector is a far CS:IP address, which is four bytes. That makes the interrupt vector table 1,024 bytes.
Walter Fuller has written: 'Build Your Own Microcomputer Based on the Intel 8088' 'Build your own computer' -- subject(s): Amateurs' manuals, Microcomputers, Intel 8088 (Microprocessor), Design and construction