Issue
147 October 2002
Watch
Me Pull A Rabbit Out of My Hat
Start
Rabbit 3000 No-Risk
CISC Peck-O-Periphs
Time Traveler One-Stop
Shopping Keep Motoring
Sources and PDF
RABBIT 3000
Fortunately, the history
and basic features of the Rabbit design are excellently
documented in the pages of Circuit Cellar, including
words of wisdom from one of chip’s developers, Monte
Dalrymple, and a five-part article series from our own
Fred Eady. [1, 2] You can check them out (not to mention
the copious documentation on the Rabbit web site) for
the inside story.
Perhaps the Rabbit 3000
is easiest to understand as the next step in the evolution
of the ’80 species (see Figure 1). At each chip along
the way between the 8080, Z80, ’180, and now the Rabbit
3000 (and EZ80), designers figured out ways to add new
and improved features while retaining the essence that
made the predecessor popular in the first place.
 |
| Figure 1—The Rabbit 3000 is the
latest in a long line of ’80 chips that goes all
the way back to the dawn of micros. |
On this historic scale,
basic evolutionary trends can be seen in the instruction
set, performance, peripherals, glue logic, and interfacing.
As you examine each trait, you can see how the Rabbit
Semiconductor 3000 continues along the trajectory set
by the ’80 chips of yore.