The Transistor: Thomas J. Bergin ©computer History Museum American University
The Transistor: Thomas J. Bergin ©computer History Museum American University
In the nineteenth century, scientists were rarely inventors: Samuel F.B. Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Alva Edison In the twentieth century, scientists invaded the domain of invention: John Fleming invented the vacuum diode tube and Lee De Forest invented the triode tube The transistor can be viewed, as can the laser, as an invention of physicists.
Source: Bunch and Hellemans, The Timetables of Technology, Simon and Schuster, 1993
William B. Shockley
I knew the transistor was important, but I never foresaw the revolution in electronics it would bring.
John Bardeen
Point-contact-transistor
Shockley immediately set out to define the effects that they had observed, i.e., to explain the physics of transistors A few months later, Shockley devised the junction transistor, a true solid-state device which did not need the whiskers of the pointcontact transistor. AT&T licensed the transistor very cheaply to other manufacturers and waived patent rights for the use of transistors in hearing aids, in the spirit of its founder, Alexander Graham Bell
Fairchild Semiconductors founded in Mountain View, CA (1957) by eight Shockley employees including Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce Bell Labs had made several improvements in the manufacturing of crystals of silicon and germanium with the impurities needed to create semiconductors
Meanwhile.
Jack Kilby worked for Texas Instruments Conceived of a manufacturing method that allowed the miniaturization of electronic circuits on semiconductor chips, called integrated circuits or ICs. Kilby had reduced the transistor to the size of a match head Texas Instruments sold these for $450.
And at Fairchild.
Noyce adapted a system called planar manufacturing, in which all the transistors and resistors were formed together on a silicon chip with the metal wiring embedded in the silicon. Noyce filed for a patent five months after TI Lawsuit: TI claimed patent infringement; TI lost but companies needed licenses from both companies.
source: Shurkin, Engines of the Mind, 1984
Bergins musings.
The greatest deterrent to success is success! Large companies tend to be conservative and bureaucratic with lengthy approval processes which stifle new ideas. Small companies have no history, they need to take risks and they have no stockholders to answer to: Apple, Osborne, etc. Starting technology companies became the new gold rush (and it was in California!)
Intel
Noyce, Moore, and Andrew Grove leave Fairchild and found Intel in 1968
focus on random access memory (RAM) chips
Question: if you can put transistors, capacitors, etc. on a chip, why couldnt you put a central processor on a chip? Ted Hoff designs the Intel 4004, the first microprocessor in 1969
based on Digitals PDP-8
Microcomputers
Ed Roberts founds Micro Instrumentation Telemetry Systems (MITS) in 1968 Popular Electronics puts the MITS Altair on the cover in January 1975 [nee PE-8, Intel 8080] Les Solomons 12 year old daughter, Lauren, was a lover of Star Trek. He asked her what the name of the computer on the Enterprise was. She said computer but why dont you call it Altair because that is where they are going tonight!
Intel processors
CPU 4004 8008 8080 8088 80286 80386 80486 Pentium Year 1971 1972 1974 1980 1982 1985 1989 1993 Data Memory 4 1K 8 16K 8 64K 8 1M 16 1M 32 4G 32 4G 64 4G MIPS
.33 3 11 41 111
References
Photos courtesy of Lucent Technologies and other web sources Bunch and Hellemans, The Timetables of Technology, Simon and Schuster, 1993 Lee, Computer Pioneers, IEEE Press, 1995 Freiberger and Swaine, Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer, Osborne/McGraw-Hill, 1984