Edward B. Eichelberger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edward B. Eichelberger (* around 1934) is an American computer scientist .

Eichelberger studied electrical engineering at Lehigh University with a bachelor's degree in 1956. He then went to IBM , where he dealt with circuit design in the Endicott development laboratory. At the same time he continued his studies at Princeton University , where he received his doctorate in 1963.

In the 1960s he developed new test and design techniques for LSI and then VLSI Design with Thomas W. Williams (Level Sensitive Scan Design). He was the manager of Advanced VLSI Technology and Testing at IBM's Mid-Hudson Valley Laboratories in Kingston. There he led various VLSI design projects (both in bipolar technology and in FET ). Retired he lives in Suffolk , Virginia .

In 1989 he received the W. Wallace McDowell Award with Thomas W. Williams . He is an IBM Fellow and received the Outstanding Contribution Award from IBM in 1973 for Level Sensitive Scan Design (LSSD) technology and an IBM Outstanding Innovation Award for Weighted Random Patterns . In 1996 he became an IEEE Fellow .

At the university he also made a name for himself as a wrestler in the 1950s.

Fonts

  • with Thomas W. Williams, E. Lindbloom, JA Waicukauski Structured logic testing , Prentice Hall 1991

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ History Lehigh Sports