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  1. Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, later known as Shockley Transistor Corporation, was a pioneering semiconductor developer founded by William Shockley, and funded by Beckman Instruments, Inc., in 1955. [2]

  2. Jun 7, 2006 · As an entrepreneur, he had brought the first semiconductor company to Silicon Valley. His death would have been mourned as a tragically early end to a brilliant career.

  3. William Shockley, a co-inventor of the transistor, took the idea of using photolithography with him when he left Bell to found Shockley Semiconductor Laboratories in Palo Alto, California, in 1956. Jay Last was one of the first people Shockley recruited for the new company.

  4. Well known as the most important figure in semiconductor physics, Shockley was able to recruit top physicists, chemists, metallurgists, and electrical engineers to his new company. To his consternation, eight dissidents left to found Fairchild Semiconductor on September 19, 1957.

  5. Aug 9, 2006 · After several years searching for an alternative career, Shockley finally left Bell Labs in 1956, returning to California to start the Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, with financial...

    • Paul Grant
    • 2006
  6. William B. Shockley was an American engineer and teacher, cowinner (with John Bardeen and Walter H. Brattain) of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1956 for their development of the transistor, a device that largely replaced the bulkier and less-efficient vacuum tube and ushered in the age of.

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  8. Feb 6, 2006 · In September 1957, a group of eight Shockley employees, led by Robert Noyce and later referred to as the "traitorous eight," resigned to form Fairchild Semiconductor. Over the subsequent decades Fairchild spawned scores of spin-offs that helped create the semiconductor and high-tech industry in Silicon Valley.