One of the packaging configurations is the dual in-line package (DIP).
The dual in-line package would be invented two years later.
The data bus was multiplexed with the address bus in order to fit a standard 40-pin dual in-line package.
Some of the variable regulators are available in packages with more than three pins, including dual in-line packages.
The original version came in a 48-pin dual in-line package and had a 20-bit address bus, allowing it to use up to 1 megabyte of memory.
The device is packaged in an 18 pin dual in-line package or in a surface mount leadless chip carrier.
Gifford, one of the few men who fully understood Widlar and his work, contributed to the market boom by introducing a dual in-line package.
A single in-line package (or SIP) has one row of connecting pins.
Chip carriers are smaller than dual in-line packages and since they use all four edges of the package can have a larger pin count.
It was derived from single in-line package.