• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Your favorite CPUs?

Page 4 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.
Ok, I am going to go against the grain here of what most people are saying. Rather than name some newer CPU, I am going to go back a bit.

The PPC 750 (And all its variants).

When the PPC750 was first launched in '97 It was a big step forward. It was the first chip that made a Laptop a viable mobile platform. It had very little power draw (3-8W depending on version), but was also quite fast for its time.

The 750FX was one of the first chips to use an SOI process, and consumed only 4W at 800MHz. Which was significantly lower than x86 based chips of the era. IBM still manufactures 750 chips which are used by more devices than you might think.


As a second chip, the Motorola 68000. While the chip was not the first 16/32 bit processor released, it became extremely popular and was used by numerous companies. Variants of this are still used today, over 30 years later. My personally favorite variant was the '040, which was one of the first CPU's with an on board FPU (For a long time MMU's and FPU's were add-on chips, and not integral to the CPU).
 
Ok, I am going to go against the grain here of what most people are saying. Rather than name some newer CPU, I am going to go back a bit.

The PPC 750 (And all its variants).

When the PPC750 was first launched in '97 It was a big step forward. It was the first chip that made a Laptop a viable mobile platform. It had very little power draw (3-8W depending on version), but was also quite fast for its time.

The 750FX was one of the first chips to use an SOI process, and consumed only 4W at 800MHz. Which was significantly lower than x86 based chips of the era. IBM still manufactures 750 chips which are used by more devices than you might think.


As a second chip, the Motorola 68000. While the chip was not the first 16/32 bit processor released, it became extremely popular and was used by numerous companies. Variants of this are still used today, over 30 years later. My personally favorite variant was the '040, which was one of the first CPU's with an on board FPU (For a long time MMU's and FPU's were add-on chips, and not integral to the CPU).

Did you own one in the day?

I can go back to the IBM PS/2 Model 80. An uber 386/25 chip for a nominal $14k back with color monitor in 1987
 
Did you own one in the day?

I can go back to the IBM PS/2 Model 80. An uber 386/25 chip for a nominal $14k back with color monitor in 1987

I had several machines using 68k based CPU's. I still have a few tucked away. I however did not own any 68000's brand new. I got them second hand in the late 80's.
 
Back
Top