A Few Quotes From...
Silicon Valley History
by Gregory Gromov
| In the beginning was the WORD and the
word was... Silicon Valley. Don Hoefler is credited
with coining the phrase: Silicon
Valley |
|
Silicon Valley is the only place on Earth not trying to figure
out how to become Silicon Valley. Robert Metcalfe |
Silicon Valley is an area that "located on the San Francisco, California, peninsula, radiates
outward from Stanford University. It is contained by the San Francisco Bay on the east,
the Santa Cruz Mountains on the west, and the Coast Range to the southeast. At the turn of
the century, when fruit orchards predominated, the area was known as the Valley of Heart's
Delight "
as Carolyn E. Tajnai, former Director (1988 - 1997) of Stanford Computer Forum begins one of her comprehencive
online-manuscripts that described Silicon Valley history from some of the WWW best
personal viewpoint.
About
40 years ago, Stanford University had some financial
problems. The authorities of university tried to solve the problems by leasing part of the
university land to high-tech companies for 99 years.
Carolyn Tajnai clarified this point of Stanford's history in
more detail:
" In the 1950's, the idea of building an industrial park
arose. The university had plenty of land over 8,000 acres....but money was needed to
finance the University's rapid postwar growth. The original bequest of his farm by Leland
Stanford prohibited the sale of this land, but there was nothing to prevent its being
leased. It turned out that long-term leases were just as attractive to industry as out
right ownership; thus, the Stanford Industrial Park was founded. The goal was to create a
center of high technology close to a cooperative university. It was a stroke of genius ,
and Terman, calling it ``our secret weapon,'' quickly suggested that leases be limited to
high technology companies that might be beneficial to Stanford. In 1951 Varian Associates
signed a lease, and in 1953 the company moved into the first building in the park. Eastman
Kodak, General Electric, Preformed Line Products, Admiral Corporation, Shockley Transistor
Laboratory of Beckman Instruments, Lockheed, Hewlett-Packard, and others followed soon
after." Fred Terman, The
father of Silicon Valley by Carolyn Tajnai, 1995
According to Varian
Associates it was a simple decision:
| "Gradually, facilities were moved from leased
quarters in San Carlos to a quiet corner of Stanford land, thus creating what is today the
Company's headquarters site, and incidentally bringingi nto being the Stanford Industrial
Park - the most successful complex of its kind in the world." Source: Varian
Associates: An Early History |
The First
building of Silicon Valley
| First Varian Associates building,
Stanford Industrial Park, Palo Alto, California, 1953. Source: "Russell and
Sigurd Varian - The Inventor and The Pilot", by Dorothy Varian. Palo Alto, 1983,
p.258. |
|
The picture is reproduced here with Varian
Associates permission since 1995.
| Is it a reasonable doubt or ... just invitation to the
further discussion? |
|
| Among the different
orgainizations that were instrumental in the process of creating Silicon Valley the
significant role was the Stanford Research Institute (SRI): After
World War II, a great industrial push was under way to reinvigorate the economy. Founded
by a small group of business executives in conjunction with Stanford University, Stanford
Research Institute (our founding name) was created in 1946 as a West Coast center of
innovation to support economic development in the region. The world's first digital
computer (ENIAC, weighing in at 30 tons) was introduced, and in what is now known as
Silicon Valley a three-bedroom home sold for $10,000. Source: SRI Timeline |
| . |
|
| Perhaps it was just
one of the reasons why at least some of SRI people appeared to be very
skeptical about the above photo of Silicon Valley's building #1. Alice
Resnick Senior Director, Corporate and Marketing Communications SRI International
wrote to us concerning this subject 31 Jan 2002 14:41:03 -0800:
For example, SRI had a building in Menlo
Park (one that we still occupy) in 1947, several years before what you call the "The
First building of Silicon Valley: First Varian Associates building, Stanford Industrial
Park, Palo Alto, California, 1953" on your web page at http://netvalley.com/. |
In
1995 William Hewlett decided to described in more details his own concept of Silicon
Valley's birth.
Supernova
of Silicon Valley:
What does it mean?
 |
|
"...in June,
1995, I had lunch at the Stanford Park Hotel and while leaving, I noticed a man holding a
cane and sitting on a bench as though waiting for someone. I walked on by and then
stopped, turned around, and walked back. I said, "Are you Mr. Hewlett?", and he
replied, "Yes". I thanked him for his kindness in verifying information for me
when I was writing my paper on "Fred Terman, The Father of Silicon Valley."He
said "But Fred Terman didn't start Silicon Valley; the beginning of Silicon Valley
was a supernova." He asked if I
knew what a supernova was and I said yes, that it was an explosion of a
large star. Mr. Hewlett spoke so softly that it was difficult to catch every word, but he
proceeded to explain that a supernova caused a rippling effect that set the stage for
future events. He explained that Lee de Forest,
who was an electronics pioneer in the Palo Alto area in the early part of the Century, and
his work were the supernova". (c)
Carolyn Tajnai, 1995 |
| Bill Hewlett, center, with his partner David Packard, left,
and former Provost Frederick Terman, who
inspired the two graduate students to follow their dream of starting an electronics
company. Hewlett and Packard honored their mentor by funding construction of the Terman
Engineering Building, dedicated in 1952. (Source: Stanford News
Service) |
|
 |
 |
Moving to California in 1910, Le De Forest ( photo above -- De Forest, Palo Alto, 1915 )
worked for Federal Telegraph Company at Palo Alto. While there, de
Forest finally made his Audion tube perform as an amplifier and sold it to the telephone
company as an amplifier of transcontinental wired phone calls. For this innovation he
received $50,000. By the beginning of 1916, he had finally perfected his Audion for its
most important task, that of an oscillator for the radiotelephone transmitter. By late
1916 de Forest had begun a series of experimental broadcasts from the Columbia Phonograph
Laboratories on 38th Street, using for one of the very first times his Audion as a
transmitter of radio: According to de Forest, "The radio telephone equipment consists
of two large Oscillion tubes, used as generators of the high frequency current."" Source: Le De Forest bio .
Photo left: Lee De Forest's first Triode or 'Audion', 1906 |
According to Rogers and Larsen, in 1912 "de Forest
and two fellow researchers for the Federal Telegraph Company, an early electronics firm,
leaned over a table watching a housefly walk across a sheet of paper. They heard the fly's
foot steps amplified 120 times, so that each step sounded like marching boots. This event
was the first time that a vacuum tube had amplified a signal; it marked the birth of
electronics and opened the door for the development of radio, television, radar, tape
recorders, and computers." Also Rogers and Larsen add that,"Lee de Forest
had a Stanford University connection; his work was partly financed by Stanford officials
and faculty." Links Between
Stanford University and Industry, by Carolyn Tajnai, 1995
Supernova
of the Silicon Valley:
Can we really see it ?
According to astrophysicist Joseph Shklovski (lectures,
1981) the total level of energy produced by human civilization during the last 300 years
of industrial revolutions, is still about one hundredth of a percent of the total energy
flow that reaches the surface of the earth from the sun. Meanwhile in recent decades of
info-tech revolution, the total level of energy that earth eradiates to space comes to a
million times more than it would have done naturally as the planet heated to 300 K. From
this point, for the last couple of decades, Earth outran planet-giants Jupiter and Saturn
and became comparable to Sun. So, for a radio-telescope's observer from outer space, the
earth's info-tech revolution looks like the birth of a new bright star on the cold
Earth-planet. Source: "National
Information Resources", by Gregory Gromov, Nauka, 1984,
p.15

What does it mean: Silicon Valley Entrepreneurial
Phenomenon?
| Let us take a look
again on the live example. Astronomy Ph.D. Frank Levinson entered
optics tech 1980 with Bell Labs. Left 1988 to start Finisar fiber optics -- high speed
networking company -- with $60,000. According to the Forbes magazine Finisar
worth $8 billion in 2000. Frank clarifies below his personal viewpoint on the sociological nature of Silicon Valley Entrepreneurial
Phenomenon: |
|
Despite its many contributions to the world economy, the technical community here in
Silicon Valley is actually much smaller than most people believe. People end up making
connections in strange ways and often these ties last for many years... My wife Wynnette
and I went to dinner at the Flea Street Café in Menlo Park recently with a small group to
hear a presentation on saving endangered species of domesticated animals such as the
Cotswold Lamb. This farm and the organization that supports it was started by Robyn
Shotwell Metcalfe...Robyns husband is Bob Metcalfe, one of the two
inventors of Ethernet. Bob and Dave Boggs invented Ethernet when they were scientists at
Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in the 1970s.
| Ethernet is also a huge factor in Finisars past successes, as
well as our future growth prospects. Bob went on to be the founder of 3Com, then to work
as an insightful and articulate columnist for InfoWorld magazine. He recently became a
venture capitalist with Polaris Ventures. Bob is witty, engaging, way smart, funny and an
especially good writer. He is a technologists techie. |
Dave Boggs (the other Ethernet inventor) was
also at the Flea Street Café dinner with us. Currently, Dave is working on optical
extensions for networks in the metropolitan area. He has steeped himself in the technology
of networking since the 1970s. Another dinner guest was Ron Crane. Ron
was a key technical contributor for 3Com from the very beginning of Ethernet. All of todays Ethernet adapter cards installed in
the tens of millions of PCs throughout the world are related to the first adapter cards
built and tested by Ron, who is still very well connected in the networking industry. |
|
You might think that I was invited to attend this dinner because Finisar is a major
participant in the Ethernet industry through its Gigabit Ethernet transceivers and other
Ethernet modules and because of a professional association I have with Bob. But
thats not the reason we were there.
We were invited to this dinner because my cat-loving daughter Alana attended preschool in
the late 1980s with Julia Metcalfe, daughter of Robyn and Bob. My wife Wynnette and Robyn
also became friends and have stayed in touch. At the time our daughters first met, Bob was
already an industry icon and I had to use my wifes and daughters friendships
to wedge my way in with the Silicon Valley geniuses behind Ethernet. Bob and Robyn really liked Wynnette and Alana (and eventually me, too!), so our
family would often be invited to their social occasions. During those times I would listen
carefully for pearls of wisdom on how Finisar could grow and make its mark on the world.
One evening years ago, Bob and I talked about Finisars early product line and he
pointed out that since we were not supporting established standards, our appeal to the
industry was being limited. Over the next few years Finisar changed our direction in line
with Bobs counsel and this was a major factor in Finisar's growth during the second
half of the 1990s.
As Paul Harvey would say, now you know the rest of the story!
|
. |
Silicon Valley Entrepreneurial Phenomenon
in more detail:
Founding
Fathers by David Jacobson, Stanford
Magazine, July/August 1998
In the midst of the depresssion, two sons of Stanford started a company in
a Palo Alto garage.
How Did Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard end up launching
the high-tech revolution?
Silicon Valley and
Route 128 by Paul Mackun
Two main areas of the American
hi-tech kitchen:
West Coast - Silicon Valley , East Coast - Route 128

See also another
version of The
History of Silicon Valley, by Alexander Loudon, 1998
Additions, suggestions, comments or questions? Contact us
Copyright
©1995-2002 Gregory Gromov
|