Zilog
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| ZiLOG | |
|---|---|
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| Type | |
| Founded | |
| Headquarters | San Jose, California |
| Key people | Federico Faggin, LaFarr Stuart |
| Industry | Semiconductors |
| Products | Z80 microprocessor |
Zilog, Inc., NASDAQ: ZILG often seen as ZiLOG (the official company denotation in 1998 through Jun 2007), is a manufacturer of 8-bit, 16-bit, 24-bit, and 32-bit microprocessorss, and is most famous for its Intel 8080-compatible Z80 series.
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[edit] History
Zilog was incorporated in California in 1974 by Federico Faggin, who left Intel after working on the 8080. The company became a subsidiary of Exxon in 1980, but the management and employees bought it back in 1989. Zilog went public in 1991, but was acquired in 1998 by Texas Pacific Group, who, after chip prices plummeted, reorganized the company in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late 2001. On January 2008, Zilog declined an unsolicited proposal made by Universal Electronics Inc to acquire the company. [1]
[edit] Products
The Z80 was an improved implementation of the Intel 8080 architecture, which was faster, more capable, and much cheaper; alongside the 6502 it was one of the most popular 8-bit processors for general purpose microcomputers and other applications. It was used in the Nintendo Game Boy, the Sinclair ZX80, ZX81 and ZX Spectrum home microcomputers as well as the MSX architecture and the Tandy TRS-80 series - among many others. Also, many Texas Instruments graphing calculators used the Z80 as the main processor, and the chip found continued use in some newer game consoles such as the Sega Mega Drive (Genesis in the United States) and Saturn. The CP/M operating system (and its huge software library featuring hits like Wordstar and dBase) was known to be "the Z80 disk operating system", and its success is partly due to the popularity of the Z80.
After the Z80 Zilog introduced the 16-bit Z8000 and 32-bit Z80000 processors, but these were not particularly successful, and the company refocused on the microcontroller market, producing both basic CPUs and application-specific integrated circuits/standard products (ASICs/ASSPs) built around a CPU core. As well as producing processors, Zilog has produced several other components. One of the most famous was the Z8530 serial communications controller as found on Sun SPARCstations and SPARCservers up to the SPARCstation 20.
Zilog also formed a Systems Division, which designed the Zilog System 8000, a Z8000- or Z80000-based multiuser computer system running a Unix derivative called ZEUS (Zilog Enhanced UNIX System).[2]
Zilog entered 32-bit microcontroller market in February 2006 with the demonstration of ARM9-based Point-Of-Sale (POS) microcontroller product line.[3] [4] The final product was released in 2007 called Zatara.[5]
[edit] Microprocessor families
- Zilog Z80 (1976)
- Zilog Z8000 (ca 1978)
- Zilog Z8 (1979)
- Zilog Z800 (1985)
- Zilog Z80000 (late 1985)
- Zilog Z280 (early 1986)
- Zilog Z180 (late 1986)
- Zilog Z380 (1994)
- Zilog eZ80 (2001)
- Zilog eZ8 (2005)
- Zilog Z16 (2006)
[edit] Microcontroller families
- Zilog Z8 Encore!
- Zilog Z8 Encore! XP
- Zilog Zatara
[edit] Flash microcontroller families
- ZNEO Z16F
[edit] Communication controllers
- Z16017/Z16M17/Z86017 PCMCIA adapter
- Z80382/Z8L382 microprocessor
- Z5380 SCSI protocol controller (based on NCR 5380)
- Z022 series single-chip modem
[edit] Infrared
- Zilog Crimzon infrared controllers
- ZHX series IrDA transceivers
[edit] Other wireless
- Z87200
- Z87L01
- Z87L10
[edit] Digital Signal Processor
- Z86295
- Z89 series
[edit] TV controllers
- Z90231
- Z90233
- Z90251
- Z90255
[edit] Line 21 Decoders
- Z86129/Z86130/Z86131
- Z86228/Z86229/Z86230
[edit] References
- ^ ZiLOG Press Release (Feb 4, 2008): "Zilog Board of Directors Declines Universal Electronics Inc.'s Unsolicited Proposal"
- ^ ZILOG Z8000. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM. Retrieved on 2008-04-22.
- ^ ZiLOG(R) Unveils 32-Bit ARM-9(R) Application-Specific Strategy to Focus on Security and Point-of-Sale Markets
- ^ New ZiLOG ARM9 Microcontroller Product Line
- ^ Zilog Leads the Secure Transactions Market with New 32-bit High Security Zatara(TM) Series ARM(R) Core Based ASSP
[edit] See also
- Applied Digital Data Systems
- LaFarr Stuart, ZiLOG's 4th employee


