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adrian_b 15 hours ago

During their early success years, Intel has made extremely few innovations. One of their few innovative products was the floating-point coprocessor 8087, which has changed completely how everybody does floating-point computations, and for which they were smart to hire external expertise (i.e. William Kahan) which has brought most of the innovative features.

On the other hand, during those years Intel has been extremely good at adopting very quickly any important innovation made by a competitor, while also succeeding to obtain better manufacturing yields, so that they were able to have greater profits, even with cheaper products.

Bellmac-32 has not been important commercially, but without it a product like Intel 80386 would have appeared only some years later.

With 80386, Intel has switched their production of CPUs from NMOS to CMOS, like also Motorola had done one year earlier with 68020. Both Intel and Motorola have drawn heavily from the experience gained by the industry with Bellmac-32.

marcosdumay 8 hours ago | parent [-]

> while also succeeding to obtain better manufacturing yields

AKA, Intel was extremely innovative in manufacturing. Turns out that because of Moore's law, that was the only dimension that mattered.

adrian_b 7 hours ago | parent [-]

I agree.