Author Topic: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today  (Read 493 times)

Palumboism

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3935
From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« on: June 06, 2026, 10:40:38 AM »
The year is 1955 and Bill Shockley has left Bell Labs to start his own company Shockley semiconductor.  At Bell, Shockley led the team that invented the transistor and he believed the future was in silicon transistors rather than the Germanium of the time.  Shockley chose the location of Mountain View California because it was close to his mother in Palo Alto.

Shockley recruited eight young scientists from all over the country to join him including Bob Noyce.  Shockley's poor people skills and abrasive demeanor lead the group to of eight to set off on their own in 1956 to start their own company.  The company is funded by Sherman Fairchild and called Fairchild Semiconductor.  Shockley called them the treacherous eight.

In 1956 AT&T was forced to give away all of their existing patents royalty free as part of a government anti trust case that would have otherwise broken up the company.  Any company in the world could use the transistor free of charge. 

At Fairchild, Bob Noyce invented the integrated circuit in 1959 on which the entire tech industry is based.  The site is a California registered historical landmark.

Palumboism

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3935
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #1 on: June 07, 2026, 05:14:43 AM »
In 1960, Mohamed Atalla and Dawon Kahng invented a type of transistor called MOSFET at Bell Labs.  Most ignored the invention, but Fairchild engineers took particular interest in it and developed and commercialized an integrated circuit using it called the MOS IC in 1964.  MOSFET allows for simpler more efficient IC production.

Bell Labs didn't see much value in MOSFET and licensed it for a very modest fee to any company.  The MOSFET transistor has gone on to become the single most produced object man has ever created.  A new Iphone has 20 billion MOSFET transistors in it.

In a 1965 article for Electronics Magazine, Gordon Moore of Fairchild observed that the number of components on integrated circuits had doubled every year since their invention with little affect on price.  This statement has become known as Moore's law and has driven the tech industry to this day.  The observation was revised to doubling every two years in 1975.  Die shrinkage is the secret sauce of tech.  It's the reason it gets better every years.




Palumboism

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3935
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #2 on: June 09, 2026, 09:31:29 PM »
In 1968 Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore leave Fairchild to found Intel.

That same year a director from Sharp comes to America and visits eleven semiconductor companies to find a supplier for chips for a new calculator.  Every company says no but one, North American Rockwell Microelectronics.  The following year the Sharp QT-8D Calculator called the Micro Compet with 4 Integrated Circuits is launched.  It's the first calculator with integrated circuits and sells over 400K units the first year.  Also in 1969 a salesman from Fairchild leaves to found a company named AMD to make knock of Fairchild chips.

In 1970 Busicom, a competitor to sharp also comes to America to find chip suppliers and Intel agrees to design and build chips for them.  The result is the first microprocessor, the Intel 4004 released in 1971.  That same year Texas Instruments launches the calculator on a chip TMS1802NC.

What follows is known as the calculator wars that lasted from 1971 to 1974 and brought many companies into making calculators including MITS, Commodore, and Sinclair.  By 1974 Texas Instruments decides to stop selling their chip to other companies and start to make calculators themselves.

MITS responds by getting into computers by making the first personal computer, the MITS Altair.
A freshman at Harvard sees the MITS Altair on the cover of an electronics magazine and decides to drop out of school to form a company with a friend to provide software for this new computer.  The company is named Microsoft.

Commodore Responds by buying a semiconductor company named MOS Technology which has designed a chip named the MOS 6502.  Chuck peddle, head of engineering at MOS Technology tells The CEO of Commodore to get out of calculators and into computers using the MOS 6502.

NaturalWonder83

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 12960
  • I don't know where the sunbeams end
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #3 on: Today at 02:03:40 AM »
Skynet, a highly advanced computer system possessing artificial intelligence (A.I.), was intended to control electronically linked weapons and defend the United States.

Skynet would eventually become self-aware and launch a global war of extermination against humanity.

The individual most directly responsible was Miles Bennett Dyson. He was the director of special projects at Cyberdyne Systems Corporation.

In a few months, he created a revolutionary type of microprocessor.

In 3 years, Cyberdyne would become the largest supplier of military computer systems. All stealth bombers would be upgraded with Cyberdyne computers, becoming fully unmanned. Afterwards they would fly with a perfect operational record.

The "Skynet Funding Bill" would be passed. The system goes online on August 4th, 1997. Human decisions would be removed from strategic defense.

Skynet would begin to learn at a geometric rate. It would become self-aware at 2:14 A.M. Eastern Time, August 29th. In a panic, they would try to pull the plug.

Skynet would fight back and launch its' missiles against the targets in Russia.
w

IroNat

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 42760
  • You snooze you lose.
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #4 on: Today at 03:45:44 AM »
We're f*cked.

Palumboism

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3935
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #5 on: Today at 05:10:46 AM »
We're f*cked.

I don't get the negativity towards AI.  Every other Phase of development for computer development was met with extreme enthusiasm.  From PC's to the internet to smart phones and streaming.  I don't remember anyone being terrified of Netscape Navigator, Yahoo, The Iphone, or Netflix streaming.

Why is it so different for AI?  What's the disconnect?  I think it has to do with the lack of charisma of the people presenting it.  There is no Steve Jobs for AI saying I give you the IPhone.  It's like a public relations disaster what the Sam Altmans and Elon Musks are doing. 

Humble Narcissist

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 36588
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #6 on: Today at 07:31:54 AM »
I don't get the negativity towards AI.  Every other Phase of development for computer development was met with extreme enthusiasm.  From PC's to the internet to smart phones and streaming.  I don't remember anyone being terrified of Netscape Navigator, Yahoo, The Iphone, or Netflix streaming.

Why is it so different for AI?  What's the disconnect?  I think it has to do with the lack of charisma of the people presenting it.  There is no Steve Jobs for AI saying I give you the IPhone.  It's like a public relations disaster what the Sam Altmans and Elon Musks are doing.
Tech has always scared people. Just look at nuclear weapons. People are terrified of them even though they are the biggest peace makers on the planet. No country with them gets invaded. Ukraine sure wishes they never gave them up. AI will make all our lives much easier just like all the other computer tech.

GymnJuice

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 7136
Re: From The Dawn Of Silicon Valley Until Today
« Reply #7 on: Today at 08:29:43 AM »
I don't get the negativity towards AI.  Every other Phase of development for computer development was met with extreme enthusiasm.  From PC's to the internet to smart phones and streaming.  I don't remember anyone being terrified of Netscape Navigator, Yahoo, The Iphone, or Netflix streaming.

Why is it so different for AI?  What's the disconnect?  I think it has to do with the lack of charisma of the people presenting it.  There is no Steve Jobs for AI saying I give you the IPhone.  It's like a public relations disaster what the Sam Altmans and Elon Musks are doing.

I think this will ultimately be a good thing. People are still figuring out how to use these tools effectively, so right now we're seeing an overabundance of AI slop everywhere, from news articles to random websites.