Is there any powerpc exclusive of motorola made in motorola without alliance
Why is it that I'm getting the feeling you're asking us to fill out information for a school assignment?
I think I'm failing to understand what you're asking for here. By definition all Power Architecture CPUs marketed as "PowerPC" are a result of the AIM Alliance, IE, the name specifically means a "POWER ISA" CPU designed and marketed for use in personal computers. (Verses workstations, servers, embedded applications, etc.) Every company making said CPUs licenses the name and certain bundles of intellectual property relating to the instruction set architecture, and in addition to that the various companies churning them out *may or may not* choose to cross-license actual hardware designs from each other. (For example, most of the PowerPC 600 CPU designs were sold by both Motorola and IBM, although each company made their own tweaked versions.) There were PowerPC compliant chips made by completely third-party-to-AIM companies; the most well-known example is P.A. Semi's doomed "PWRficient" CPU.
If the question is simply did Motorola ever make a "PowerPC" CPU completely independent of IBM then the answer is no; the "Power" in PowerPC is derived from IBM's contribution of the "POWER" instruction ISA from their RS/6000 line of high-end UNIX workstations to the project. Prior to AIM Motorola was pushing a RISC design called the
88000 which was basically flopping, but had a bus design better suited to small personal computers than IBM's POWER chips. (I believe at this point POWER will still implemented as a multi-chip cluster.) Thus the PowerPC 601 basically was a slightly dumbed-down POWER1 squeezed behind the 88000's CPU bus.
So, really, if you want to argue that anyone "owns" PowerPC the best argument can be made for IBM, not Motorola. Apple, however, tended to prefer Motorola's chips (largely because they made a big marketing push for Altivec, which was Motorola's idea, and Motorola mostly had a better grasp of how to make the right price/performance tradeoffs for the PC market than IBM) until Motorola/Freescale basically gave up trying to make them any faster. Turning back to IBM for the G5/970 was basically pure desperation, and we all know how that ended.
I read that the most powerful member was the 68060. Was the powerpc made by motorola in the motorola plant or was it made with the alliance? Thanks
I think you're confused. Are you interested in PowerPCs or Motorola 68k CPUs? The 68060 was the fastest and last "direct" descendant of 1979's 68000 family. It debuted in 1994 and was roughly comparable to Intel's original Pentium CPU in speed, although its floating point performance was decidedly worse. (The Pentium's FPU was a huge advance over the 80486's, while the 68060's was barely better than the 68040.) It came out too late to make any serious impact; at this point basically every company that had been using the 68000 family had jumped to other architectures because it was clear that Motorola had no interest in continuing to develop the line, unlike Intel with their investment in continually improving x86. But anyway, yeah: the 68060 has *basically nothing* to do with PowerPC, other than PowerPC being the reason it was the end of the 68000 line.(*)
(* Motorola did make a *related* family of CPUs called "ColdFire" that are similar to the 68000 but not directly object-code compatible. You can still buy these, they come in speeds up to a few hundred mhz. However, even the fastest ones aren't that much faster than the 68060, so they're only of interest to the embedded market. The whole line is basically on life support at this point because there's little point in using Coldfire when similar ARM CPUs are available from many other vendors for less money.)