|
|
The 486s are very similar to their immediate predecessor, the Intel 80386. The main differences are that the 486 has an optimised instruction set, has an on-chip unified instruction and data cache, an optional on-chip floating-point unit (FPU), and an enhanced bus interface unit. These improvements yield a rough doubling in performance over an Intel 80386 at the same clock rate. However, some low-end 486 models were actually slower than the highest-speed 386s, especially so with the 'SX' 486s.
There are several suffixes and variants including:
The 486 processor has been licensed or reverse engineered by other companies such as IBM, Texas Instruments, AMD, Cyrix, and Chips & Technologies. Some are almost exact duplicates in specifications and performance, some aren't.
The successor to the 486 is the Pentium processor.
See also List of Intel microprocessors
External links
Preceded by:
Intel 80386Intel microprocessors
Succeeded by:
Intel Pentium
Based on material from FOLDOC, used with permission.\n