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[[File:Timex Sinclair 1000 Motherboard BL (cropped Ferranti ULA).jpg|thumb|Ferranti {{abbr|ULA|Uncommitted Logic Array}} 2C210E on a [[Timex Sinclair 1000]] motherboard]]
Early gate arrays were low-performance and relatively large and expensive compared to state-of-the-art n-MOS technology then being used for custom chips. CMOS technology was being driven by very low-power applications such as watch chips and battery-operated portable instrumentation, not performance. They were also well under the performance of the existing dominant logic technology, [[transistor–transistor logic
By the early 1980s, gate arrays were starting to move out of their niche applications to the general market. Several factors in technology and markets were converging. Size and performance were increasing; automation was maturing; technology became "hot" when in 1981 IBM introduced its new flagship [[IBM 308X|3081]] mainframe with CPU comprising gate arrays,; they were used in a consumer product, the ZX81; and new entrants to the market increased visibility and credibility.<ref>{{cite book |first=Chris |last=Smith |title=The ZX Spectrum ULA: How To Design A Microcomputer |publisher=ZX Design and Media |oclc=751703922 |date=2010 |isbn=9780956507105 |pages= |url=http://www.zxdesign.info/book/insideULA.shtml}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Uncommitted IC logic |date=5 April 1980 |work=Design How-To |publisher=EDN |url=https://www.edn.com/uncommitted-ic-logic/}}</ref>
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