Xref: utzoo comp.sys.intel:1251 comp.misc:9128 comp.sys.ibm.pc:51853 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!ucsd!sdd.hp.com!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!aplcen!uunet!ogicse!intelhf!int13!tim From: tim@int13.hf.intel.com (Timothy E. Forsyth) Newsgroups: comp.sys.intel,comp.misc,comp.sys.ibm.pc Subject: Microchip inventor, Intel Corp. founder Robert Noyce dies Summary: He will be missed Message-ID: <809@int13.hf.intel.com> Date: 4 Jun 90 17:39:04 GMT Followup-To: comp.sys.intel Organization: Intel Corp., OEM MicroComputer Platform Division, Hillsboro, OR Lines: 72 As our company's flags fly at half-staff in reverence of the passing of one of our founders Robert Noyce, I felt it appropriate to post the following article from The Oregonian. - Tim ----- From the Portland, OR "The Oregonian, Monday, June 4, 1990" "Microchip inventor, Intel Corp. founder Robert Noyce dies" By Constance L. Hays (New York Times News Service) Robert N. Noyce, one of the inventors of the microchip that revolutionized the electronics industry and gave rise to the high technology era, died Sunday at Seaton Medical Center in Austin, Texas, after suffering a heart attack at his home. He was 62. While Noyce's name never became widely known, his work helped make possible all sorts of products, including the personal computer, the pocket calculator, programmable coffeemakers and microwave ovens and computerized flight plans for commercial and military aircraft. In many ways, Noyce was an embodiment of Silicon Valley, the area of Northern California that is home to a great many high technology companies, many of them started by young entrepreneurs. While his research opened doors for many technical advances, Noyce also played a leading role in the commercialization of electronics and as an industry spokesman who frequently lobbied in Washington. Noyce, who once described his career as the result of a succession of dissatisfactions, developed a system of interconnecting transistors on a single silicon chip, known as integrated circuitry. He was awarded a patent in 1959, and the technology, which could manage many times more information, quickly became the basis of the modern computer and permitted a miniaturization of electronics used in many products. Jack Kilby, a staff scientist at Texas Instruments Inc. who is now retired, is also recognized as an inventor of the integrated circuit, and holds patents as well. The two men worked independently. "Bob Noyce was an instrumental figure in creating the semiconductor industry, which today is a $50 billion industry driving a $500 billion electronics industry," said Stan Victor, a spokesman for Texas Instruments. "He will be missed." Noyce founded the Intel Corp., which developed the microprocessor that is the heart of most personal computers, and helped start a number of other computer companies in Silicon Valley. "He was considered the mayor of Silicon Valley," said Jim Jarrett, a spokesman for Intel. A founder of the Semiconductor Industry Association in 1975, Noyce was frequently in Washington to lobby on behalf of semiconductor manufacturers. At the time of his death, Noyce was the president and chief executive of Sematech Inc., a research consortium in Austin that was organized by 14 corporations in an attempt to help the American computer industry catch up with the Japanese in semiconductor manufacturing technology. Industry executives said finding a successor for him at Semattech would be difficult. "He was clearly a person of stature who understood both the technical aspects of the business as well as the business itself," said Federico Faggin, who designed the microprocessor at Intel and is now president of Synaptics, a computer company in San Jose, Calif. "It's a very big loss of Sematech and for the country, really. I don't think there is another one like him." The chairman of Intel, Gordon E. Moore, said in a statement: "The electronics industry lost a legendary figure today with Bob Noyce's sudden death. Bob's achievements put him in a class by himself: inventor of the integrated circuit, founder of two major American companies, and the first chief executive of Sematech." Noyce remained a vice chairman of Intel even after he was named to a search committee looking for a leader for Sematech, which has a $200 million annual budget, half from the Department of Defense and half from industry. After the search process became embarrassingly long and failed to turn up anyone willing to take the post, Noyce agreed in 1988 to head the consortium, after initially saying he was too old. --- end article --- -- >>>> Western Conference Finals: Portland 3, Pheonix 2 - GO BLAZERS! <<<< Tim Forsyth, tim@int13.hf.intel.com or forsytim@ccm.hf.intel.com Intel Corp., OEM MicroComputer Platform Division, Hillsboro, Oregon, USA