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Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High Tech, 1930-1970 (Inside Technology) 1st Edition
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I n Making Silicon Valley, Christophe Lécuyer shows that the explosive growth of the personal computer industry in Silicon Valley was the culmination of decades of growth and innovation in the San Francisco-area electronics industry. Using the tools of science and technology studies, he explores the formation of Silicon Valley as an industrial district, from its beginnings as the home of a few radio enterprises that operated in the shadow of RCA and other East Coast firms through its establishment as a center of the electronics industry and a leading producer of power grid tubes, microwave tubes, and semiconductors. He traces the emergence of the innovative practices that made this growth possible by following key groups of engineers and entrepreneurs. He examines the forces outside Silicon Valley that shaped the industry -- in particular the effect of military patronage and procurement on the growth of the industry and on the development of technologies -- and considers the influence of Stanford University and other local institutions of higher learning.
Lécuyer argues that Silicon Valley's emergence and its growth were made possible by the development of unique competencies in manufacturing, in product engineering, and in management. Entrepreneurs learned to integrate invention, design, manufacturing, and sales logistics, and they developed incentives to attract and retain a skilled and motivated workforce. The largest Silicon Valley firms -- including Eitel-McCullough (Eimac), Litton Industries, Varian Associates, Fairchild Semiconductor, and Intel -- dominated the American markets for advanced tubes and semiconductors and, because of their innovations in manufacturing, design, and management, served as models and incubators for other electronics ventures in the area.
- ISBN-100262122812
- ISBN-13978-0262122818
- Edition1st
- PublisherThe MIT Press
- Publication dateNovember 18, 2005
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions6 x 0.69 x 9 inches
- Print length393 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Lécuyer's book is the most scrupulous scholarly exploration so far of the cluster of innovative firms that has come to be called Silicon Valley. It is a book that should be read by anyone curious about the emergence of the high-tech electronics firms that have created this remarkable concentration of innovative talent.
(Nathan Rosenberg, Professor of Economics (Emeritus), Stanford University)Silicon Valley wannabes search for the Valley's secrets of success. Lécuyer's impressively informed response reminds them that God is in the manufacturing details.
(Thomas P. Hughes, author of Human-Built World: How to Think about Technology and Culture)Making Silicon Valley is meatier than its contemporaries. Dense and replete with footnotes, it's an expert book written for experts-readers who already know Robert Noyce from Gordon Moore. For them, it's a detailed and nuanced discussion of how and why Silicon Valley emerged as a center of manufacturing, product engineering, and management.
(HBS Working Knowledge)About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : The MIT Press; 1st edition (November 18, 2005)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 393 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0262122812
- ISBN-13 : 978-0262122818
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 1.75 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.69 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,456,096 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,781 in Computers & Technology Industry
- #4,180 in Company Business Profiles (Books)
- #74,014 in U.S. State & Local History
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I found the level of this book to be just right: a solid scholarly tone but not overly technical or erudite. It is definitely not a popular history in the sense of revolving around individual personalities and amusing anecdotes, although it is of course impossible not to tell this story without referring to some remarkable personalities. I was particularly impressed by Charles Litton, who brought a remarkable blend of hands-on mechanical skills, physical intuition, engineering prowess, and business acumen to bear on the difficult problems of designing and manufacturing reliable, high-frequency, high-power radio tubes.
This book will be of great interest to anyone interested in the history of technology, electronics, and computers, as well the political, social, and economic forces which have shaped Silicon Valley, the computer industry, California, and the United States as a whole.
Lecuyer's narrative is engaging, and populated by remarkable characters like the Varian brothers, Gordon Moore, Jean Hoerni, Robert Noyce, Andy Grove, and Apple Computer's "two Steves." The scholarship is deep and thorough.
Making Silicon Valley strikes me as an important contriubtion to the literature that would be of interest to many readers who are curious about the history of technology and business, well beyond the academic specialists for whom it will do doubt become standard fare.
Top reviews from other countries
This is an academic history with lots of references to primary sources, such as company reports, correspondence from the time and lots of later communications and interviews with actors by the author and others. Lécuyer includes accounts of broader softer factors such as the role of ham operators (amateur radio enthusiasts) in building up technical skill in the area before large scale vacuum tube occurred. However harder and more direct factors are considered such as military procurement and research funding directives. The major focus of the narrative are the individual careers of various engineers who founded companies and pursued innovation or production of vacuum tubes, later transistors and integrated circuits.
The role of the vacuum tube industry as building competencies later used in the semi-conductor industry and also providing a business model for west coast firms is emphasized. The role of larger more established east coast firms tends to be dealt with more tangentially in the narrative. While some technical discussion occurs about how certain technologies work much is left un discussed and this can be a bit disorienting. I am still not quite clear on what a power vacuum tube is or what its specialized role in electronics is. The focus is almost exclusively on the actual component technology and the applications such as radar gets much less discussion, computers are barely described in any detail. The story is framed by rise of Apple after the period of the narrative as something that the stage was set for in this earlier period and that has some key resonances with it.
Dieses early-Silicon Valley hat noch nichts mit dem Silicon Valley seit 1980 zu tun, welches nach der Silikonisierung durch Transistoren, Integrierten Schaltungen und Halbleiterspeichern, die Technologie der Digitalisierung mit Computern und Netzwerken zusammen brachte, um Software ergänzte und Produkte für informative und soziale Techniken entwickelte, welche die Welt verändern.
Definitiv eine Empfehlung für Interessierte an Wissenschaft, Technologie, Technik, Produkte, Business und dem entsprechenden Transfer.







