Keith Diefendorff: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
Diefendorff started at [[Texas Instruments]], designing [[integrated circuits]] processors and systems. Later Diefendorff joined [[Motorola]] and was the chief architect of the early [[RISC]] processor [[Motorola 88000|88110]]. The 88110, albeit not a huge commercial success acted as inspiration for the next processor Diefendorff was assigned as chief architect for - the [[PowerPC]].
Jim Diefendorff started at [[Texas Instruments]], designing [[integrated circuits]] processors and systems. Later Diefendorff joined [[Motorola]] and was the chief architect of the early [[RISC]] processor [[Motorola 88000|88110]]. The 88110, albeit not a huge commercial success acted as inspiration for the next processor Diefendorff was assigned as chief architect for - the [[PowerPC]].


After his work at Motorola Diefendorrf moved to [[NexGen]] as director of technical [[x86]]-strategy. Diefendorff joined [[AMD]] when NexGen was acquired by AMD.
After his work at Motorola Diefendorrf moved to [[NexGen]] as director of technical [[x86]]-strategy. Diefendorff joined [[AMD]] when NexGen was acquired by AMD.

Revision as of 16:45, 13 November 2007

Keith Diefendorff is a computer architect and veteran in the microprocessor industry.

Diefendorff is one of the persons that has led the industry in developing RISC processors, both for embedded systems and superscalar high performance systems. He is one of the main designers of the PowerPC family of processors.

Background

Jim Diefendorff started at Texas Instruments, designing integrated circuits processors and systems. Later Diefendorff joined Motorola and was the chief architect of the early RISC processor 88110. The 88110, albeit not a huge commercial success acted as inspiration for the next processor Diefendorff was assigned as chief architect for - the PowerPC.

After his work at Motorola Diefendorrf moved to NexGen as director of technical x86-strategy. Diefendorff joined AMD when NexGen was acquired by AMD.

From AMD Diefendorrf then moved to Apple as architect for the AltiVec media extensions developed for the PowerPC processors used by Apple.

Keith Diefendorff has been working in the embedded processor space. First at the embedded processor IP-core company ARC International. After ARC Diefendorrf moved to MIPS Technologies.

Diefendorrf has also worked as processor analyst, and editor in chief (1998-2001) for the industry magazine Microprocessor Report.

I'm not sure competition from any company is Intel's biggest problem. A bigger problem is generating demand for its faster, more profitable desktop chips..

— Keith Diefendorff on the main threats to Intel