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SIA Celebrates 60th Birthday of Microelectronics Industry
[December 14, 2007]

SIA Celebrates 60th Birthday of Microelectronics Industry


(Wireless News Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)
The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) this week hailed the
transistor as the greatest invention of the 20th century.

The first working transistor was created 60 years ago, on December 16,
1947 at Bell Laboratories in New Jersey. The inventors William
Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain were awarded the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 1956 for their invention.

The invention of the transistor 60 years ago launched a transformation
of our world that is still unfolding, said SIA President George
Scalise. The importance of this historic milestone cannot be
overstated. The transistor is the key building block of countless
electronics products that have revolutionized virtually every aspect of
human life. This year the worldwide microelectronics industry will
produce 900 million transistors for every man, woman, and child on
earth a total of 6,000,000,000,000,000,000 (6 quintillion) transistors.

The invention of the transistor marked the beginning of U.S. leadership
in technology, Scalise continued. For nearly 60 years, leadership in
technology has driven exponential improvements in the productivity of
American workers, enabled world-leading economic growth, contributed to
significant improvements in our standard of living, and ensured our
national security.

Scalise noted that while the worldwide semiconductor industry continues
to produce billions of discrete transistors every year, the
overwhelming proportion of transistors today are in integrated
circuits. The invention of the solid-state transistor was an essential
precursor to the subsequent invention of the integrated circuit. The
brilliant work of William Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain
laid the foundations for the worldwide semiconductor industry that will
surpass $257 billion in sales this year, Scalise continued.

Scalise cautioned, however, that the innovation leadership America has
enjoyed since this landmark discovery is in jeopardy if key policies
are not quickly adopted by Congress. The invention of the transistor 60
years ago did not happen in isolation. It was the result of a
world-class American workforce, a culture that encouraged daring and
entrepreneurialism, and government policies that embraced investment in
research. We need to replicate that model today if we want the
invention of the next fundamental world-changing technology to be on
our shores.

The SIA is the leading voice for the semiconductor industry and has
represented U.S. semiconductor companies since 1977.

SIA: www.sia-online.org.

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((Distributed on behalf of 10Meters via M2 Communications Ltd -
http://www.m2.com))
((10Meters - http://www.10meters.com))

Copyright 2007 Wireless News

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