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Bio: |
Stanley
Mazor worked on early microprocessor chips at Intel and shares
patents on the 4004 and 8080. Previously he worked on the
design of a high level language computer, "Symbol" at Fairchild
R&D (1964). He has worked in six start-up companies including:
NTI-Cadabra, BEA Systems, Synopsys, CAT*S, and Silicon Compilers.
He studied mathematics at San Francisco State University in
1963. He has published 50 articles relating to LSI chips and
a book "A Guide to VHDL", published by Kluwer in 1993. He
was awarded the Kyoto Prize, the Ron Brown American Innovator
Award, inducted into the Inventor's Hall of Fame, the SFSU
Wall of Fame, and more recently the SIA Robert Noyce Award.
His hobby is architecture. |