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From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03) :   [ foldoc ]

  Motorola 68000
       
           (MC68000) The first member of Motorola, Inc.'s
          family of 16- and 32-bit microprocessors.  The successor to
          the Motorola 6809 and followed by the Motorola 68010.
       
          The 68000 has 32-bit registers but only a 16-bit ALU and
          external data bus.  It has 24-bit addressing and a linear
          address space, with none of the evil segment registers of
          Intel's contemporary processors that make programming them
          unpleasant.  That means that a single directly accessed
          array or structure can be larger than 64KB in size.
          Addresses are computed as 32 bit, but the top 8 bits are cut
          to fit the address bus into a 64-pin package (address and data
          share a bus in the 40 pin packages of the 8086 and Zilog
          Z8000).
       
          The 68000 has sixteen 32-bit registers, split into data and
          address registers.  One address register is reserved for the
          Stack Pointer.  Any register, of either type, can be used
          for any function except direct addressing.  Only address
          registers can be used as the source of an address, but data
          registers can provide the offset from an address.
       
          Like the Zilog Z8000, the 68000 features a supervisor and
          user mode, each with its own Stack Pointer.  The Zilog
          Z8000 and 68000 are similar in capabilities, but the 68000 is
          32 bits internally, making it faster and eliminating forced
          segmentations.
       
          Like many other CPUs of its generation, it can fetch the next
          instruction during execution (2 stage pipeline).
       
          The 68000 was used in many workstations, notably early
          Sun-2 machines, and personal computers, notably Apple
          Computer's first Macintoshes and the Amiga.  It was also
          used in most of Sega's early arcade machines, and in the
          Genesis/{Megadrive" rel="nofollow">Genesis/{Megadrive consoles.
       
          Variants of the 68000 include the 68HC000 (a low-power HCMOS
          implementation) and the 68008 (an eight-bit data bus version
          used in the Sinclair QL).
       
          ["The 68000: Principles and Programming", Leo Scanlon, 1981].
       
          (2003-07-11)
       
       

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