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Intel 4004

invention · 1971

Computer Hardware Microprocessors Electronics

The Intel 4004 was the first commercially available microprocessor—a complete CPU on a single chip. Released in 1971, it launched the microprocessor revolution that put computing power in everything from calculators to spacecraft.

Origins

The 4004 was designed by Federico Faggin, Ted Hoff, and Stanley Mazor at Intel for Busicom, a Japanese calculator company. Rather than designing custom chips, Hoff proposed a general-purpose processor that could be programmed for different functions.

Technical Specifications

The 4004 was modest by later standards:

Yet it contained all the fundamental components of a CPU: arithmetic logic unit, control unit, and registers.

Significance

The 4004 proved that a complete processor could fit on a single chip. This enabled:

Legacy

Intel went on to dominate the microprocessor market. The 4004’s descendants—the 8080, 8086, and x86 family—became the foundation of the PC industry. The concept of a general-purpose microprocessor, rather than custom hardware, transformed electronics.