Difference between revisions of "Robert Noyce"

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(co-founder at Fairchild, too)
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'''Robert Noyce''' was the co-inventor of the [[integrated circuit]] (along with [[Jack Kilby]] of [[Texas Instruments]]), in the late 1950s. (Several people had described the basic concept before them, but they were the first to reduce the idea to working hardware.)
 
'''Robert Noyce''' was the co-inventor of the [[integrated circuit]] (along with [[Jack Kilby]] of [[Texas Instruments]]), in the late 1950s. (Several people had described the basic concept before them, but they were the first to reduce the idea to working hardware.)
  
At the time he was employed at [[Fairchild Semiconductor]]; he later went on to co-found [[Intel]].
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At the time he was employed at [[Fairchild Semiconductor]] (where he had been a co-founder); he later went on to co-found [[Intel]].
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 02:05, 7 April 2023

Robert Noyce was the co-inventor of the integrated circuit (along with Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments), in the late 1950s. (Several people had described the basic concept before them, but they were the first to reduce the idea to working hardware.)

At the time he was employed at Fairchild Semiconductor (where he had been a co-founder); he later went on to co-found Intel.

External links