Bregalad wrote:
Quote:
The embedded market, which is where 65xx products are most often used, isn't at all like the world of PCs
I know. However, ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, and other similar processor legacies released newer and better versions of their CPU regularly. Sure sometimes the improvements are more commercial/marketing than technical, but at least they have more than 2 model of CPU for 30 years.
I'm always mindful of a quote I heard a while back: newer isn't necessarily better.
As you point out, the "new and improved" sales pitch is most often just that: a sales pitch. None of the above devices are new. Yes, they do get a die shrink once in a while, and hence the clock gets ramped up a bit. But the end result is only an incremental improvement. Of course, when the sales and marketing folks get done, they make it sound as though the slight die shrink and slight clock increase is revolutionary.
The interesting thing about the 65xx ISA, especially the 65C816, is that the performance has stayed consistently high for the die size and clock rate. That 200 MHz 65C02-on-an-FPGA that Garth mentioned has enormous throughput, despite being based on a 35 year old design. The ARM, MIPS and some others sound as though they are really fast when you read the manufacturers' descriptions. However, their throughput per clock cycle is actually no better than the 65C02/65C816 and in some cases, actually worse.
By the way, I first heard the "newer isn't necessarily better" adage 47 years ago when I was in the U.S. Navy. The ship I was on was engaging in gunfire support exercises on targets that were some 11 miles away. Our five inch guns were scoring better than 90 percent accuracy at this range, this despite being on a rolling and pitching destroyer at sea. Our fire control system consisted of radar, stereoscopic gun sights, gyroscopes and an analog ballistic computer, all technology that was mostly developed prior to World War II.
Also in our squadron was a relatively new ship fitted with the latest gadgets and firing on shore targets at the same range, with the newer 5 inch 54 caliber guns (ours were 5 inch 38 caliber). Their accuracy was around 75 percent, this despite the ship being some 20 years newer than ours. When I expressed surprise about this, the captain himself, who had seen combat during the Korean War, said, and I recall his exact words, "Son, newer isn't necessarily better. If it were, ships like ours would have been scrapped long ago."