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  1. Feb 1, 1994 · His passion for the field led him from New York City’s used electronics stores to elite university laboratories, through the intense early years of the microprocessor revolution and the tumult of the video game industry, and ultimately to his job today: high-tech private eye.

  2. National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductee Marcian Hoff led the team at Intel that defined the architecture of the microprocessor in which he invented.

    • Ted Hoff
    • Science Was His Game
    • Hired at Intel
    • Birth of The Microprocessor
    • Accolades and Later Career
    • Periodicals
    • Online

    American engineer Ted Hoff (born 1937) is credited with changing the face of the world as one of the key people behind the creation of the first microprocessor. While working for Intel in 1969, he developed the architecture that made a single-chip Central Processing Unit(CPU) possible. That product came on the market as the Intel 4004 in 1971 and t...

    Hoff was born Marcian Edward Hoff, Jr. on October 28, 1937, in Rochester, New York. His father, who worked in railway signaling and his uncle, a chemical engineer, were big influences on him as a boy, and encouraged his early interest in science. Chemistry was his first love, but that affection waned after Hoff was told there was no practical caree...

    In 1968, Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, and Andrew Grove founded the Intel Development Corporation (Intel was shorthand for integrated electronics). Noyce, who served as the start-up's president, had helped invent the integrated circuit. The new company had been established with the idea of developing semiconductor memory, but Hoff was not aware of th...

    It is important to note that the computers of the 1960s were quite different animals from those of later years. They were huge, for instance, often requiring acre-sized rooms. Circuit chips were needed for each application a computer performed, as opposed to a single chip, or “brain,” that could run programs. Personal computers did not exist, and f...

    Following up his opening career act could hardly have been an easy matter, but Hoff was not one to rest on his laurels. He was, for example, involved with the second and third generations of the 4004, the 8008 and 8080, respectively, as were Mazor and Faggin. In 1975, he turned his considerable abilities toward the telephone industry, at the behest...

    Business Wire, November 2, 2000. Investor's Business Daily, November 5, 2001. San Francisco Chronicle, June 29, 1996. Sunday Times (London, England), November 3, 1996.

    “Fascinating Facts About Ted Hoff Inventor of the Microprocessor in 1968,” Idea Finder, http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventors/hoff.htm(November 29, 2007). Freiberger, Paul and Swaine, Michael, “Development of the Microprocessor,” Fire in the Valley, http://www.fireinthevalley.com/fitv_book1.html(November 29, 2007). Freiberger, Paul and Swaine...

  3. Marcian “Ted” Hoff (PhD '62 EE), is best known as the architect of the first microprocessor. Intel’s 4004 was released in November 1971, 35 years ago this month. The history that his ingenuity helped spawn is now the subject of a new DVD, the Microprocessor Chronicles.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Marcian_HoffMarcian Hoff - Wikipedia

    Hoff joined Intel in 1968 as employee number 12 as "manager of applications research", and is credited with coming up with the idea of using a "universal processor" rather than a variety of custom-designed circuits in the architectural idea and an instruction set formulated with Stanley Mazor in 1969 for the Intel 4004—the chip that started ...

  5. Apr 15, 2020 · As the electrical engineer responsible for the Busicom design, Ted Hoff thought that it could be achieved with a 4-bit central processing unit (CPU) on a single microchip.

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  7. May 4, 2011 · Ted Hoff was employee number 12 at Intel. Working under Silicon Valley icons Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore, he helped to invent the first ever microprocessor.

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