OF COMPUTER APPLICATIONS COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING‚ THIRUVANANTHAPURAM ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING LAB – MANUAL 2005 INDEX CONTENTS PAGE NO 1. The 8085 microprocessor 1.1 Introduction 1.2 8085 Internal Architecture 1.3 8085 Pin Diagram 1.4 8085 Addressing Modes 1 1 1 6 11 2. The 8085 Microprocessor Trainer Kit 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Specifications of STS -85 VLC 2.2.1 Hardware Specifications 2.2.2 Software Description 12 12 12 13 15 3. 8085 Instruction Set
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UNIT III 8086 MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACING 3.1 Introduction This unit explains how to design and implement an 8086 based microcomputer system. To design an 8086 based system‚ it is necessary to know how to interface the 8086 microprocessor with memory and input and output devices. Due to the mismatch in the speed between the microprocessor and other devices‚ a set of latches and buffers are required to interface the microprocessor with other devices. In this unit‚ you will learn about the way in
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indeed. The Microprocessor has been around since 1971 years‚ but in the last few years it has changed the American calculators to video games and computers (Givone 1). Many microprocessors have been manufactured for all sorts of products; some have succeeded and some have not. This paper will discuss the evolution and history of the most prominent 16 and 32 bit microprocessors in the microcomputer and how they are similar to and different from each other. Because microprocessors are a subject
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The history of the microprocessor begins with the birth of the Intel 4004‚ the first commercially available microprocessor. The roots of this development can be traced directly back to the inventors of the transistor. In 1955‚ William Shockley founded Shockley Semiconductor in Palo Alto‚ California (arguably the birth of Silicon Valley). This company eventually employed Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce‚ who left with others to form Fairchild Semiconductor in 1957. While at Fairchild‚ Noyce played a
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Date: Topic: Production Possibilities & Opportunity Cost 1. The slope of the production possibility frontier shows A. the technically efficient combinations of the two goods B. how factor inputs must be changed to keep them fully employed C. the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other D. how consumers are willing to trade one good for another 2. A. OM B. OH C. YF D. MH 3. Which of the following will not shift a country’s production possibilities frontier outward
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Chapter 05 Production and Cost Essay Questions 1. Always Round Tire has a production function of Q = 300 L.75 K.5. In the short run‚ if L = 250 and K = 25‚ what happens to the output of tires if L jumps to 300 and then 350. What law does this illustrate? When L=250 and K=25 then Q=94307. When L increases to 300‚ Q increases to 108‚127. When L increases to 350‚ Q increases to 121‚379. This shows the effects of diminishing marginal returns to labor as a factor of production. AASCB:
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Production and Cost Analysis Please read this article and answer the questions keeping in mind the information we have covered in the textbook: Fundamentals of Managerial Economics by Mark Hirschey (at least a good paragraph for each question) Article #1: Supersizing Hits Freight World By JENNIFER LEVITZ AUGUST 15‚ 2010‚ The Wall Street Journal When Kraft Foods Inc. packs trucks with weighty items such as jars of Miracle Whip and pouches of Capri Sun juice‚ 40% of the rigs must leave the loading
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Circuit: The Evolution of an Electronic Miracle The microprocessor evolved over the course of many years of research‚ and people all over the world enjoy the benefits of this electronic miracle. It is difficult to think of anything that has affected modern life more than this invention. Cellular phones‚ wristwatches‚ calculators‚ automobiles‚ stereos‚ televisions‚ and computers are just a few of the thousands of electronic devices that have a microchip at the heart of its operation. Over the years
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some form of computers. All this would not be possible without the invention of the integrated circuit or IC. This led to the creation of the Microprocessor or CPU (central processing unit) which acts as the brain of the computer. To better help illustrate the function and need for a CPU you must go back to the first all electric computers. Now computers have a long history but modern electronic computers got their start with the vacuum tube based machines of late forties and fifties. The vacuum tube
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EE 201 : Digital Circuits and Microprocessors Dr. Amit Sethi Room 303‚ EEE Dept. 2529‚ amitsethi Objectives for this session Introduce the 8085 Microprocessor Introduction to 8085 programming model Introduction to 8085 instruction set All computers are based on the Turing Machine concept • In 1937‚ Alan Turing described this abstract idea of a computer • Turing Machines consist of: – A tape of infinite length with symbols printed in cells – A read-write head that can move along
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