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Intellectual Property Cores
News Release from: LSI Europe
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial
Team on 22 January 2008
Replica transistor celebrates 60th
birthday
LSI has donated a replica of the first transistor to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.
LSI has donated a replica of the first transistor to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the invention of the transistor Invented by Bell Labs scientists John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley 60 years ago, the transistor is the building block of today's integrated circuits, the brains behind everything from computers and cellphones to guided missiles and heart pacemakers
This article was originally published on Electronicstalk on 23 May 2001 at 8.00am (UK)
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The transistor was first manufactured commercially at the former Western Electric plant (which later became Agere Systems) on Union Boulevard in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in 1951.
Agere merged with LSI Logic on 2nd April 2007 to form LSI Corporation.
"It's often said that today's accomplishments are possible because we stand on the shoulders of giants from the previous generation", said Abhi Talwalkar, President and CEO of LSI.
"That statement is especially true today as we celebrate the invention of the transistor, arguably the most important invention of the 20th century".
"Fortunately, the innovative spirit that created the transistor burns as brightly as ever today".
John Toole, CEO of the Computer History Museum, said: "The Computer History Museum is pleased to add this replica of the first transistor to its collection on the 60th anniversary of its invention".
"The computer could never have evolved as we know it today without this fundamental building block of modern microelectronics".
The transistor, which replaced the vacuum tube, can be used to both amplify electrical signals and to switch them on and off.
The transistor's smaller sise, higher reliability, lower power consumption, and lower cost revolutionised both the form factor and economics of electronic devices.
Since its invention, the sise of transistors has continued to shrink to the point that today more than six billion transistors - about one for every human alive today - could fit easily in an area the sise of a credit card.
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