Book Summaries
Ch 5: Mortars and Mass Production (Chip War)
- Bob Noyce recognized the importance of military and space applications to Fairchild Semiconductor’s early success, but he also foresaw a much larger civilian market.
- Bob Noyce recognized the importance of military and space applications to Fairchild Semiconductor’s early success, but he also foresaw a much larger civilian market.
- To create this market, Noyce declined most military research contracts and instead focused on developing mass-market products from chips used in rockets or satellites.
- The first integrated circuit produced for commercial markets was designed for a NASA satellite and used in a Zenith hearing aid. • Despite surrounding defense contractors, the Pentagon underestimated how quickly startups like Fairchild would transform electronics due to their nimbleness compared to big bureaucracies.
- Under Gordon Moore’s direction at Fairchild R&D team not only devised new technology but opened new civilian markets as well with his prediction of exponential growth in computing power known as “Moore’s Law”.
- Moore realized that the integrated circuit would revolutionize society beyond rockets and radars.
- The military demanded features in chips which were also useful for business applications, leading to a boom of civilian chip sales.
- Robert McNamara’s defense reforms resulted in Fairchild offering off-the-shelf integrated circuits at drastically lower prices, creating an expanded market for chips.
- By 1968, computer industry was buying as many chips as the military and Fairchild’s products served 80% of this market due to Bob Noyce’s price cuts.
- Apollo 11 used a guidance computer powered by Fairchild’s integrate d circuits; however Silicon Valley engineers had become less reliant on defense contracts with booming chip markets becoming their focus instead .
- This financial success drove Moore’s Law forward while employees looked for ways to make money from it – even cofounder Bob Noyce started considering leaving the company himself eventually .
YARPP List
Related posts:
- Law 17: Seize the Historical Moment (The Laws of Human Nature)
- Part 2: Isolate the Victim (The Art of Seduction)
- Chapter 16: The Capitalist Creed (Sapiens)
- On Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra Summary (8.4/10)
Keep Reading
Related Articles
Book Summaries
Jonathan Haidt on Moral Psychology
### Moral Psychology Moral psychology is going through a renaissance, and we are living through the new synthesis in ethics that E. O. Wilson called for in 1975. We’re sure to disagree on many points today, but I think that we here all agree on a number of things.
Book Summaries
Art Prices Are Down—But Don’t Blame the Economy Just Yet
Art prices have taken a nosedive lately, and the numbers don’t lie. In 2024, global art sales slumped 12% to $57.5 billion, the sharpest drop since the pandemic, per the *Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Report 2025*.
Book Summaries
Ch.1 (The Fateful Triangle)
In the shadow of the current conflict between Hamas and Israel in 2023, it is enlightening to revisit Noam Chomsky’s “[The Fateful Triangle,](https://amzn.to/3stlhJU)” first published in 1983.
Book Summaries
Why Cryptocurrencies are Terrible Investments (And You Shouldn’t Buy Any)
I’m sure you’ve heard all about the incredible returns that investors have made by buying cryptocurrencies. I’m sure you’re also wondering why you haven’t made any money from cryptos yet. After all, everybody else seems to be getting rich…except for you.