Ken Shirriff's blog
Computer history, restoring vintage computers, IC reverse engineering, and whatever
Reverse engineering standard cell logic in the Intel 386 processor
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The 386 processor (1985) was Intel's most complex processor at the time, with 285,000 transistors. Intel had scheduled 50 person-years t...
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Reverse engineering CMOS, illustrated with a vintage Soviet counter chip
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I recently came across an interesting die photo of a Soviet 1 chip, probably designed in the 1970s. This article provides an introductory g...
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Inside the mechanical Bendix Air Data Computer, part 3: pressure transducers
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The Bendix Central Air Data Computer (CADC) is an electromechanical analog computer that uses gears and cams for its mathematics. It w...
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