The following is an excerpt from an article that appeared in Infoworld on August 15, 1987 INTEL FINALIZES SPECIFICATIONS FOR 80486 CHIP By Mark Brownstein: Intel Corp. has finalized its specifications for the 80486, the next-generation processor in its 8086/80286/80386 series, according to a company spokesman. The processor, targeted for completion in 1990, will be fabricated using low-power CMOS technology. It will have a 32-bit data bus and the equivalent of 1 million to 1.25 million transistors. By contrast, the 80286 chip has some 135,000 transistors, and the 80386 chip uses about 250,000 transistors, the company said. At a presentation given to major Businessland clients, David House, senior vice president of Intel and general manager of the company's Microcomputer Group, described what he called a "tuned computing engine". The engine will consist of a CPU, memory management, accelerators such as math coprocessors, and I/O controllers, including communications ports and high-speed graphics support. "We can put the CPU, cache, accelerator, and I/O on the chip and still have 250,000 transistors available," House said. A computer built around the 80486 chip will have the performance equivalent to the IBM Sierra mainframe computer, according to House, and will be able to execute 20 million instructions per second. The chip will also support the use of multiple processors - the addition of which will further improve the performance of the system. The 80486 will be compatible with the 8086, 80186, 80286, and 80386 chips, the spokesman stated. The chip may offer an improved human interface, which requires higher resolution displays, instantly available windows controlled through hardware, and artificial intelligence capability, House said. With the dropping price of memory and the 80486's capability to address extremely large amounts of memory, a high-speed, user-intuitive interface built mainly in hardware is conceivable, according to House. Future systems using the chip should also have hardware support for the leading communications and networking standards. House hinted that connectivity may be the proposed purpose of the 250,000 transistors not committed to features already described.