ZX Computing


Inside The Chip

Author: Patrick Cain
Publisher: H. Davies
Machine: Spectrum 48K

 
Published in ZX Computing #16

Inside The Chip

An understanding of a microchip is not necessary to use a computer, but I should imagine that most programmers have wondered from time to time what type of magic takes place between input and output to effect this phenomenon which takes up so much of our time. Some will naturally enough have investigated the subject further; others will probably have thought the investigation too involved and contented themselves with a niggling curiosity. It is to these people that Inside The Chip, by H. Davis and M. Wharton, readily lends itself.

Like the other books in the series, Inside The Chip is not intended, nor does it attempt, to be a text book. As the others do, it touches on the main principles of its subject without becoming entangled in an analysis of the practical unit. The book is a journey inside the chip, explaining on the way what the chip is, how it works and describing some of the amazing things it can do. The guides on the journey are a team of micro sized men who draw the reader's attention to the different types of chips, what each type is used for and what many of the jargon terms associated with chips mean. The analogy works well.

27 pages on and the reader will have been introduced, in a simplified way, to the electronic theory, discovered how chips are designed, how they are made and how the different types of chips are used. Registers, control circuits, addresses and the microprocessor's clock are all dealt with in the same way. The book is concise, informative and is fun to read. Little effort is required as a result to get this far and many of those niggling queries ought to be by now disappearing or maybe perhaps becoming sufficiently interesting to examine closer.

Part two is less colourful; but nonetheless as interesting as it comes to terms with slightly more involved notions. 'Input and Output', inside the ALU, a simple logic circuit to build, how the ALU does arithmetic, hints on building circuits, each is handled with the same uncomplicated ease as the earlier topics. Certainly not Cambridge research level yet, but sufficient information within the 48 pages to either whet an appetite or satisfy a less inquisitive mind.

Given that you can't read every book, some are too time consuming, some are mostly irrelevant, some are too involved: Inside The Chip is perhaps one you should read. Written by H. Davies and M. Wharton, Inside The Chip is a book that is probably worthy of a glimpse from most people. ISBN 0-86020-729-3.

Patrick Cain

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