Intel's Former CEO (and First Hire) Andy Grove Dead at 79 38
The Verge reports the death at age 79 of former Intel CEO, Andy Grove, one of the best-known names in Silicon Valley, and in fact one of the people who are behind the fecund technological and business climate that made Silicon Valley a household name. Grove's professional life at Intel spanned five decades, beginning as a day-one, number-one hire, as director of engineering; he went on to serve as president, CEO, and chairman of the board, managing to write several books along the way; "Only the Paranoid Survive" is probably the best known. From The Verge's story: During Groves' tenure as CEO, Intel produced chips including the 386 and Pentium, which became name brands unto themselves and laid the groundwork for much of the personal computing era. "Andy approached corporate strategy and leadership in ways that continue to influence prominent thinkers and companies around the world," Intel Chairman Andy Bryant said in a statement. "He combined the analytic approach of a scientist with an ability to engage others in honest and deep conversation, which sustained Intel's success over a period that saw the rise of the personal computer, the Internet and Silicon Valley."
Former Andy Grove? (Score:1)
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People aren't used to the new regime here at Slashdot yet. Errors in submitted stories get corrected now!
On the downside... people sometimes get modded down after pointing out these errors because the mods didn't see the original entry.
Andy Grove - the pioneer (Score:2, Interesting)
Without the massive contributions from pioneers such as Andy Grove there is no silicon valley
Among the many quotes of Mr. Grove, I especially like:
" Leading by example trumps everything else "
" Bad companies are destroyed by crisis, Good companies survive them, Great companies are improved by them "
A remarkable man (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A remarkable man (Score:5, Interesting)
I heard him speak once a long time ago. He was truly one of a very few, a more than capable engineer who could also manage and deal with management 'types'. I have been lucky in my career to work for a couple of that type, and I must say it was a rare pleasure to talk to someone who understood what you were doing, and could get up from behind their desk and likely go do your job as well as you could. That kind of personality seems to have a short shelf life past a certain point in management. I am sure he will be greatly missed.
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His presence will be missed.
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Did you not see Monty Python's the Meaning of Life? The scene where the condemned prisoner chooses his own means of execution?
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Death by snu-snu!
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For some people, work is what they live for...and dying working is the best way to go. Unfortunately there exists those who would prolong a dying persons agony by forcing them to undergo procedures to prolong the agony of death rather than just letting their "loved" ones go. I've often thought that those "loved ones" are really full of hate.
Thanks (Score:1)
I completely agree with you. The medical-pharma doctor-industry complex makes a lot of money based on the message that they can "make you almost live forever". Never mind that this is completely against nature and that many people have a painful last few years. It would be better if we died with most of our organs functioning properly, especially the brain.
But hey, we can make lots of dollars with "saving" the heart of 83 year olds for another ten years. Never mind their brain stopped working nicely at age
Truly a great man, (Score:4, Funny)
He was one of a few that made modern porn viewing possible. I will fap in his honor tonight to a plethora of bukkake and gangbang vids.
RIP (Score:5, Informative)
He was a damn fine engineer, CEO, and businessman. We have lost one of cornerstones of the PC revolution.
We'll always remember you Andy (Score:2)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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I read one of his books, and a biography about him. A very interesting, insightful, and influential fellow.
I wonder how much of a hand he had in shaping Intel's unique culture? I've had the opportunity to work with a number of people coming out of Intel and they have been some of the most focused and driven people I've ever worked with.
He did more... (Score:5, Interesting)
When Andy Grove contracted prostate cancer, he used his research skills and his notoriety to significantly advance prostate cancer awareness - not just in regular media but in business journals - suddenly breaking the barriers to open and frank discussion about this killer disease amongst men.
The net result was that countless lives were saved because of him. RIP, Andy Grove.
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Gordon Moore? That's none of our business
It eventually does. (Score:2, Flamebait)
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It could also be that I'm not very good at jokes.
Really ? (Score:1)
I heard Bill Hewlett and David Packard created Silicon Valley. Also "both" has something to do with the number 2 I am thinking.
Probably USG and all its spending (the aircraft industry in California, NASA, NRO, CIA, NSA) had a major hand in all this. Both people I mentioned worked at one time at the pentagon, where they could acquire very valuable knowledge and business contacts.
It also seems Bill and Dave invented Silly Valley. They swallowed the new age liberal stuff tail and sinker. Their kids were not gr
And the Grandfather (Score:1)
..seems to be this man: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Terman
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There are certain stages in their lives when you
have to give them the time when they want it.
You can't run your family like a company.
It doesn't work.
- Andy Grove (1936-2016)
Grove's "Transmitters vs Receivers" law (Score:1)
Years ago I went to a presentation by Andy Grove where he said something I found very profound, but I've never seen quoted which I've always considered "Grove's law". I'll paraphrase it as "the cost of receivers equals the cost of the transmitter".
He explained that if you compared the price of a television broadcasting equipment to TVs, you roughly got a correlation between the number of TV stations vs TV sets based on their relative prices. Similarly, if you compared the cost of radio broadcasting equipmen