05/25/2015
Three writers—Thackray, CEO of the Chemical Heritage Foundation; Brock, a leading electronics expert; and Jones, a British journalist—closely examine the professional and private lives of Gordon Moore, a noted electrical engineer and entrepreneur who helped usher in the Information Age but whose name is rarely heard today. Following Moore's studies at Caltech in 1954, he was recruited by Nobel Prize winner William Shockley to work in his semiconductor research laboratory. Originally impressed by Shockley's methods, Moore later broke away from the bitter squabbles of the lab and resigned with several staff members to start a semiconductor division of military contractor Fairchild, developing a batch process capable of producing multiple transistors from a single silicon wafer. He developed "Moore's Law," describing the rapid pace of transistor miniaturization, while working at Fairchild. In 1968 Moore co-founded the groundbreaking microchip company Intel Corporation. Thackray, Brock, and Jones run through Moore's multifaceted life with a refreshing lack of tech talk or science jargon, revealing a man who realized his dreams while maintaining a stable, affirming personal life. Agent: Melissa Chinchillo, Fletcher & Company. (May)
Moore's Law: The Life of Gordon Moore, Silicon Valley's Quiet Revolutionary
Narrated by Don Hagen
Arnold ThackrayUnabridged — 24 hours, 27 minutes
Moore's Law: The Life of Gordon Moore, Silicon Valley's Quiet Revolutionary
Narrated by Don Hagen
Arnold ThackrayUnabridged — 24 hours, 27 minutes
Overview
Editorial Reviews
"I can remember when a transistor radio had one transistor in it--and now a giveaway bottle opener containing 8 billion of them is sitting on my desk. Gordon Moore and a small circle of accomplices, inseparable from the California landscape in which their story took form, were at the center of the most radical transformation in the history of technology. This is a definitive chronicle: authoritative, detailed, and well told."—George Dyson, author of Turing's Cathedral and Darwin Among the Machines
"Almost everyone knows Moore's Law. Almost no one knows the Moore behind this law. Finally a book describing the quiet, unassuming technology godfather of Silicon Valley. A great read about a great man whose work truly changed the world."—Craig R. Barrett, former CEO & chairman, Intel Corporation
"The book is stuffed with Moore's recollections of the crises Intel faced and how they were overcome, including early issues with processing, the occasional collapse of the memory market, the arrival of the Japanese as customers and competitor and their dedication to quality, the microprocessor wars--all these are well worth reading."—EE Journal
"Thackray, Brock and Jones make a compelling argument that Moore was the most important of the three [founders of Intel].... Moore helped build one of the modern economy's foundational companies and in the process established a template for the Silicon Valley start-up company. It's a remarkable legacy, and one worthy of close study for the lessons it has to teach."—The Deal Pipeline
"Moore's Law is an engaging biography and a definitive account of the man behind the famous prediction. The authors are Arnold Thackray, David C. Brock and Rachel Jones--a chemist, a historian and a journalist - whose varied expertise makes for an informed, thorough and readable chronicle.... Gordon Moore's forecast was spectacularly right. Yet, as this compelling biography proves, even if he had never hazarded it, he would remain a legend in Silicon Valley."—Wall Street Journal
"With care and color, Moore's Law tells us how Gordon Moore, at the center of the IT revolution, applied his knowledge and insight in a quiet and effective way. When Gordon talked, everyone listened."—George P. Shultz, former U. S. Secretary of State and Thomas W. and Susan B. Ford Distinguished Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University
"A remarkable book about a remarkable man, told with great style and refreshing candor."—Carver Mead, the Gordon and Betty Moore Professor Emeritus of Engineering and Applied Science, Caltech and winner of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation
Arnold Thackray and his co-authors integrate business history with the history of science and technology with great success, rendering this biography of Silicon Valley's most important revolutionary a captivating and deeply illuminating read. Moore's Law is also a signal contribution to the study of California history, showing how the social and cultural circumstances of the Bay Area enabled Gordon Moore's creativity.—David A. Hollinger, Preston Hotchkis Professor of History, Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley
"Gordon Moore's story is one of disruptive innovation on the grandest scale, practiced by a brilliant technologist. Now at last we have the book that tells the story. Moore's Law offers a compelling, absorbing account of Silicon Valley, and its role in human progress."—Clayton Christensen, Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, and author of The Innovator's Dilemma
"If you think you know Moore's Law, prepare to be enlightened. If you think you know Gordon Moore, prepare to be enthralled. And if all of this is new to you, prepare for the ride of your life. This is the definitive story of the central theorem of the digital age, the man behind it, and its ongoing impact on us all."—John Hollar, President & CEO, Computer History Museum
Arnold Thackray, David Brock and Rachel Jones transform Moore from a man 'doing something inscrutable in the margins' to a comprehensible, fiercely driven technophile who shaped history from the inside out."—Nature
"Thackray, Brock, and Jones run through Moore's multifaceted life with a refreshing lack of tech talk or science jargon, revealing a man who realized his dreams while maintaining a stable, affirming personal life."—Publishers Weekly
"[An] admiring, richly detailed book.... [T]echies will be delighted with its full treatment of an important figure often overshadowed by such luminaries as Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison."—Kirkus Reviews
"Finally, Gordon Moore gets the biography he deserves! One of the foremost pioneers of the digital revolution, he is a visionary, engineer, and revered leader. His 'law' defined and guided the growth of computing power, and his business acumen helped to create Silicon Valley. This is an inspiring and instructive tale of how brilliance and leadership can coexist with humility and decency in a truly extraordinary person."—Walter Isaacson, author of Steve Jobs
05/01/2015
Almost anyone with a computer has heard of the Intel company. Thackray (founder, Chemical Heritage Fdn.; Joseph Priestley Professor Emeritus, Univ. of Pennsylvania) tells the story of the man who founded and developed the computer giant. In an era in which the innovations of World War II were still pushing the boundaries of science and life, Gordon Moore (b. 1929) exploded into the chemistry universe. He then discovered his true love, the thing that would take him and central California to the top of the semiconductor and processor world: hardware creation. While Intel doesn't come into the text until over half way through, the rich detail of this book gives a picture of life in pre-silicon Silicon Valley. Unlike so many of the personalities that shape modern industry, Moore shaped Intel, his life, and business through strategy and his observation of what is now called Moore's Law: that the number of transistors per square inch on integrated circuits doubles every year. VERDICT Historians, 20th-century scientists, and budding computer revolutionaries will enjoy this study. The events in the book are recent enough that the average person can relate to them and observe the current implications and advances of Moore's transformative technologies.—Dawn Lowe-Wincentsen, Oregon Inst. of Technology, Portland
2015-03-16
An authorized biography of the little-known chemist who helped create Silicon Valley. Now a billionaire in his mid-80s, Gordon Moore earned his doctorate at Caltech, and in the 1950s and '60s, he created and led two of the nation's most influential technology firms, Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel. He pioneered the chemical process for making transistors—the building bricks in microchips—which power everything in modern society from missiles and satellites to smartphones and other consumer technologies. In this admiring, richly detailed book, Chemical Heritage Foundation founding CEO Thackray (Atoms and Powers, 2013, etc.), electronics journalist Brock, and technology journalist Jones recount Moore's life as "the master of transistor technology and the prophet of the microchip's promise." His "Moore's Law," posited 50 years ago, predicted accurately that computing power will double every two years. In contrast to many Silicon Valley moguls, Moore has long been a quiet, unpretentious figure who has eschewed wealth and fame and lived a practical life guided by facts, not feelings. Based largely on oral history transcripts, the authors tell Moore's story from his childhood as a California sheriff's son to his early work with physicist William Shockley to his tremendous success at Intel, where Andy Grove, his "interpreter, enforcer, and hatchet man," helped him achieve his agenda. They portray a driven, intensely focused scientist and businessman who took comfort in his love of the outdoors and his conventional family life. The silicon transistor is "the object most crafted by humans." By 1995, the 30th anniversary of Moore's declaration of Moore's Law, more than 70 million billion had been produced. This overlong book cries out for further pruning of both text and photos (including 32 featuring Moore, many of them head shots), but techies will be delighted with its full treatment of an important figure often overshadowed by such luminaries as Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison.
Product Details
BN ID: | 2940170376360 |
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Publisher: | Ascent Audio |
Publication date: | 05/01/2015 |
Edition description: | Unabridged |