Quote:
Is (WDC)Western Design Center 6502 the same with Motorola 6502?
Both instruction and package?
The 6502 was a big enemy of Motorola. But whatever brand you're looking at, if it doesn't at least have a "C" (for CMOS) between "65" and "02", it definitely falls way short of WDC's. The CMOS 65c02 not only consumed a lot less power (and ran cooler) than the old NMOS ones that probably have not been made in 15-20 years, but also had all the NMOS bugs fixed, and added more instructions and addressing modes. WDC's 65c02 has further improved on that with more instructions and addressing modes, and added some more signals at the pins, namely ML\ (memory lock) output (pin 5 on a DIP), BE (bus enable) input (pin 36 on a DIP), and VP\ (vector pull) output (pin 1 on a DIP). They also made the RDY line bidirectional. These signal additions facilitate DMA, multiprocessing, and hardware interrupt prioritizing. Stopping the processor to save more power when nothing needs attention is now more practical than it was with earlier CMOS ones, whereas the NMOS 6502 could not be stopped at all. WDC's 65c02's are guaranteed to work at least to 14MHz.
Edit, over 14 years later: I posted an article summarizing the many differences between the CMOS and NMOS 6502, at
http://wilsonminesco.com/NMOS-CMOSdif/