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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC)
INTC 46.47-4.5%Jan 30 9:30 AM EST

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To: Bill Jackson who wrote (159136)2/18/2002 4:22:05 PM
From: wanna_bmw  Read Replies (1) of 186894
 
Bill, you want to know where the KEY Alpha people work now? They work at Intel.

intel.com

Most recently, Daniel J. Casaletto was Vice President of the Alpha Development Group at Compaq Computer Corporation. He was responsible for the development and delivery of Alpha microprocessors and supporting technologies for entry-level server systems. His organization was primarily made up of hardware and software engineers developing microprocessors, related chipsets, motherboards, firmware, IC package design and CAD. His group also oversaw Alpha microprocessor production, and worked closely with the semiconductor foundries.

With more than 25 years of combined service with Compaq and Digital Equipment Corporation, Casaletto has extensive management experience in the engineering field. From 1994 to 1998, Casaletto held the following positions at Digital: Vice President, Digital Semiconductor Engineering; Vice President and Product Line Manager for Emerging Technologies, which included StrongARM, multimedia accelerator, and PCI bridge chips; and Vice President and Product Line Manager for the Alpha Business Segment.


intel.com

Grove joined Intel as part of a June 2001 agreement with Compaq Computer Corporation that called for the transfer of microprocessor and compiler design expertise to Intel. Prior to joining Intel, Grove was a Compaq fellow and director of compiler development for Compaq's 64-bit Alpha family of computers.

With 30 years of combined service to Compaq and Digital Equipment Corporation, Grove has held various software development positions where he has led the development of compilers for several processor families. He also played a major role in driving the Alpha processor's performance capabilities during the past decade. He holds one patent and has published several papers on compiler technology.


intel.com

Emer joined Intel as part of a June 2001 agreement with Compaq Computer Corporation that called for the transfer of microprocessor engineering and design expertise to Intel. Prior to joining Intel, Emer was a Compaq Fellow and Director of Alpha Architecture Research, where he led research efforts for future processors for Compaq's 64-bit family of servers.

With 22 years of combined service to Compaq and Digital Equipment Corporation, Emer has held various research and advanced development positions investigating processor microarchitecture designs and developing performance modeling and evaluation techniques. Emer is recognized as one of the developers of the widely employed quantitative approach to processor performance evaluation. More recently, he has been recognized for his contributions in the advancement of simultaneous multithreading technology. He holds nine patents with three pending. He has also published more than 25 papers.


intel.com

Fossum joined Intel as part of a June 2001 agreement with Compaq Computer Corporation that called for the transfer of microprocessor engineering and design expertise to Intel.

Prior to joining Intel, Fossum held a variety of positions during 28 years of combined service to Compaq and Digital Equipment Corporation. Since 1998, he served as a Compaq Fellow and was lead architect for future versions of the Alpha microprocessor. From 1991 to 1998, Fossum led a team conducting processor and compiler technology research. Prior to this, he was a consulting engineer and helped design several VAX processors for Digital.


intel.com

Lowney joined Intel as part of a June 2001 agreement with Compaq Computer Corporation that called for the transfer of microprocessor engineering and design expertise to Intel.

Prior to joining Intel, he was a Compaq Fellow and Director of Compiler and Architecture Development for the Alpha Microprocessor Group. His responsibilities included developing compiler technology and tuning compilers for Alpha systems, providing architectural direction to the microprocessor design teams and designing Alpha architecture extensions.


intel.com

He is currently Director of the Enterprise Architecture Lab in Intel's Technology & Research Labs. Previously, he was Director of Strategic Planning for all Intel Architecture processors and chipsets. He has been with Intel since 1995 and has managed system architecture and performance analysis activities. Prior to joining Intel, he spent almost 18 years at Digital Equipment Corporation, where he managed processor and system architecture, and performance analysis work related to the VAX, Prism, MIPS, and Alpha architectures. He also worked at Texas Instruments for 4 years in their research labs in a variety of areas including magnetic bubble memories, charge coupled devices, fault tolerant memories, and computer architecture.

Dr. Bhandarkar holds 15 U.S. Patents and has published more than 30 technical papers in various journals and conference proceedings. He is also the author of a book titled Alpha Architecture and Implementations."


intel.com

Grundmann joined Intel as part of a June 2001 agreement with Compaq Computer Corporation that called for the transfer of microprocessor engineering and design expertise to Intel.

Prior to joining Intel, he was a Compaq Fellow and CAD Director for the Alpha Microprocessor Group. His responsibilities included specification and development of design methodologies, and CAD tools for microprocessor design. In addition to his CAD background, his experiences includes managing, architectural design and being a hardware designer of seven microprocessor chips and ten peripheral support chip designs.


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