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Gene Amdahl Essay Research Paper

Gene Amdahl Essay, Research Paper


Overview


One of the original architects of the


business mainframe computer, including IBM’s System/360 computer


line, Amdahl started the IBM-compatible market when he left IBM to found


Amdahl Corporation. Amdahl’s work has been called brilliant and genius


by his peers. The Times of London named him one of the "1,000 Makers


of the 20th Century" in 1991, and mainframe magazine Computerworld


considered Amdahl one of the 25 people "who changed the world."


He is the founder of four companies, Amdahl Corporation, Trilogy Systems


(now part of Elxsi Corporation), Andor Systems, and Commercial Data Servers


(CDS).


Early history


Gene Myron Amdahl was born in South Dakota in 1922. After serving two


years in the U.S. Navy during World War II, where he learned electronics,


and taking a course in computer programming, he received a bachelors degree


in engineering physics at South Dakota


State University in 1948. In 1952 he completed his doctorate in theoretical


physics at the University of Wisconsin,


where he designed his first computer, the Wisconsin Integrally Synchronized


Computer (WISC).


He began his career with IBM in 1952, and became the chief design engineer


of the IBM 704. In 1955, Amdahl worked with others to design the Datatron,


which led to a computer called the Stretch, and eventually became the


IBM 7030, a computer that used the new transistor technology. In 1956,


after just four short years with IBM, Amdahl became unhappy with the company


and quit. After five years of working for other computer companies, he


returned to IBM in 1960.


During the 1960s, Amdahl gained recognition as the principle architect


of IBM’s impressive System


360 series of mainframe computers. The IBM System 360 was based on


the Stretch, which Amdahl had worked on in 1955. The 360 series was one


of the greatest success stories in the computer industry and became the


main ingredient to IBM’s enormous profitability in the late 1960s.


Leaving IBM…again


Amdahl became an IBM Fellow and was able to pursue his own research projects.


In 1969, he was director of IBM’s


Advanced Computing Systems Laboratory in Menlo Park, California. He


recommended that the laboratory be shut down, which IBM did, and presented


his ideas about the internal barriers that prevented IBM from shooting


for the high end of computer development. Although his ideas were accepted,


IBM executives refused to change policies and Amdahl left IBM again.


In 1970, Amdahl formed his own company, Amdahl


Corporation, in Sunnyvale, California. His plan was to compete head-to-head


with IBM in the mainframe market. Most industry analysts considered this


to be career suicide and gave his start-up company very little chance


of surviving. But survive it did, and actually prospered. Instead of creating


a rival system to IBM, Amdahl created discounted computers that could


be substituted for name brand models and run the same software. Basically,


he designed the first computer clones, known then as "plug-to-plug


compatibles." Amdahl became the most celebrated entrepreneur in the


computer industry for awhile. The only major criticism that was raised


about Amdahl Corporation at the time was that Amdahl took start-up money


from Fujitsu Ltd. of Japan in exchange for American mainframe technology.


In 1975, Amdahl Corporation shipped its first computer, the Amdahl 470


V/6. Over the next few years, Amdahl and IBM leap-frogged each other with


faster, smaller, and cheaper computers. In 1979, Gene Amdahl began moving


away from Amdahl Corporation when he resigned his post as chairman. He


became chairman emeritus for less than a year, leaving Amdahl Corporation


in 1980 to found Trilogy Systems Corporation.


With the success of Amdahl Corporation, Amdahl had no trouble interesting


investors in this new company and easily raised $230 million in start-up


money. Again, his plan was to compete with IBM, and also Amdahl Corporation,


in the high

-end mainframe computer market. In addition, Amdahl planned


to completely redesign the semiconductor chips that powered the computers.


His dream was to combine the functions of 100 separate chips onto one


superchip that would work faster and more efficiently than the multiple


chips.


Trilogy’s Misfortune


Unfortunately, Trilogy was hounded by disasters. Torrential rains delayed


construction of the chip plant, then invaded the air conditioning, destroying


the clean room atmosphere and all the chips currently being created. At


that point, Amdahl had spent one-third of the start-up money with nothing


to show for it. To save Trilogy, Amdahl spent the remainder of the money


to acquire Elxsi Corporation, a computer manufacturer, in 1985. The new


company continued to flounder and never achieved great success. In 1989,


Amdahl stepped down as chairman of Elxsi to devote more time to his next


venture.


In 1987, Amdahl founded his third company, this one called Andor Systems


after the "and" and "or" logic gates of computer circuitry.


This time his aim was to build computers that would compete with IBM’s


smaller mainframes. Industry analysts uniformly gave the company very


little chance of success. But Amdahl felt he had an edge — he could make


small mainframe computers more cheaply than IBM. He could use new technology


that allowed him to pack the computer’s central processor onto one


board, rather than the several used by IBM, and he redesigned the compiler


to work more quickly and efficiently. These innovations allowed Andor’s


computers to take up less space and generate less heat, a distinct advantage


to customers who no longer would need giant air-conditioned rooms in which


to place their computers.


But Andor was plagued by bad chips, causing a delay of almost two years


before the first computers hit the market. Meanwhile, IBM came out with


its own midsize computer using some of the same technology employed by


Andor. To survive, Andor had to come up with other peripheral products


that it could quickly get on the market. But Andor never achieved the


success it was after with the small mainframes, and in 1991 it had scaled


back products to include only a data backup system. By 1994, the company


had yet to turn a profit. Eventually, the company declared bankruptcy.


The Main-frame Devotee


But Gene Amdahl was not ready to give up. In 1996, at the age of 74,


he started his fourth company, this one called Commercial


Data Servers (CDS). Through CDS, Amdahl intends to distribute IBM-compatible,


PC-based mainframes that use cryogenically-cooled CMOS processors and


a new processor design that he created. CDS is targeting its products


at companies that need the capabilities and selling price of a smaller


mainframe, a market that CDS believes IBM and other manufacturers aren’t


serving adequately.


Gene Amdahl continues his quest to merge mainframe technologies with


the more popular PC technology. Though many find these two areas incompatible


(mainframe means centralized, controlled computing; PCs are for individual


computing), Amdahl won’t give in to those who believe mainframes


are dinosaurs that have outlived their usefulness. And, apparently he


doesn’t intend to ever give up.


BIBLIOGRAPHY


Who’s Who in America


Levine, Jonathan B. "Gene Amdahl tries for two out


of three" Business Week, June 27, 1988


Pare, Terence P. "Lions in winter" Fortune,


July 4, 1988


"Elxsi names chairman" The New York Times,


March 16, 1989, p.D14


Pitta, Julie "Strike two?" Forbes,


December 9, 1991


Nash, Jim "Gene Amdahl: mainframe guru still driven,


still a believer in vision" The Business Journal, January


10, 1994


Hast, Adele, Ed., International Directory of Company


Histories, Volume III, St. James Press, 1991


"Cryogenically-cooled CMOS systems will come out


of Amdahl" IBM System User International, July 19, 1996


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