Originally Posted by
MarcK
The 286 was introduced 2/1982, and notified as end-of-life (last ship) 3/1999.
That would be the Intel 80286, I expect. However Intel would certainly license the core to embedded systems developers for production at rates and for markets in which Intel could no longer afford to maintain fabrication. For example: Renasas 80C286 went EOL in 2017. Would not be surprised if someone bought 5000 of them for the shelf.
I would expect the next generation processor to be an FPGA rather than a microprocessor. I see some links exploring ADA on FPGAs, but it seems to be programming the FPGA to act like a microprocessor.