From Computer Weekly, Thursday November 30, 1978, "Rockwell joins 16-bit micro market"
"Announcement expected next month from Rockwell Electronics, with a part currently designated Super 65"
Largely compatible with 6502 bus structure, it's said to have an instruction set capable of running Pascal. "Rockwell is developing a compiler for the language."
"Super 65 runs at a 10MHz clock rate and can address 2 Mbytes of memory directly. Some peripheral circuit are under development, including an 80MByte memory management chip."
So that implies a 21 bit address bus - 16 bits plus 5 - with the MMU extending that to 26 bits and a bit more... ???
And the company is said to be developing a silicon on sapphire version. I remember when SoS was to be the future of fast chips!
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File comment: Rockwell's 16-bit Super 65 leaked in November 1978
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However, it looks like it got killed, or was declared non-viable, when Rockwell became a second source for the 68000, according to this Italian bulletin:
https://archive.org/stream/Bit_005/Bit_005_djvu.txt"Rockwell, the American primary second source of the powerful 16-bit device developed by Motorola, plans to start sampling from the second quarter of 1980.
The 68000, declared a company spokesman, was selected because considered suitable to "safeguard" the investments made in the Super 65 in terms of resources and time and suitable to complement the line of micro 6500."