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      • On April 25, 1961, Fairchild Semiconductor co-founder Robert Noyce was issued patent No. 2981877 for his “semiconductor device-and-lead structure,” which would come to be known as the integrated circuit.
      www.edn.com/noyce-receives-1st-ic-patent-april-25-1961/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Robert_NoyceRobert Noyce - Wikipedia

    Patents. Noyce was granted 15 patents. Patents are listed in order issued, not filed. U.S. patent 2,875,141 Method and apparatus for forming semiconductor structures, filed August 1954, issued February 1959, assigned to Philco Corporation

  3. Apr 25, 2019 · On April 25, 1961, Fairchild Semiconductor co-founder Robert Noyce was issued patent No. 2981877 for his “semiconductor device-and-lead structure,” which would come to be known as the integrated circuit.

  4. May 30, 2024 · Noyce held 16 patents and was awarded the National Medal of Science in 1979. A lifelong swimmer (and former Iowa state diving champion), Noyce died of a heart attack following a morning swim in 1990.

    • Michael Aaron Dennis
  5. Fairchild Semiconductor filed a patent for a semiconductor integrated circuit based on the planar process on July 30, 1959. That was the first time he revolutionized the semiconductor industry. He stayed with Fairchild until 1968, when he left with Gordon Moore to found Intel.

  6. On the 25th April 1961, the U.S. Patent Office grants Robert Noyce a patent for his invention of the silicon integrated circuit. At around the same time, Jack Kilby independently conceived of the same idea of the integrated circuit, building a protoype based on germanium.

  7. The U.S. Patent Office issues Robert Noyce a patent for the integrated circuit, starting a long battle with Jack Kilby over who had rights to the patent. Kilby had invented a germanium version of the circuits, while Noyce developed the silicon integrated circuit -- the one that grew to be more accepted.

  8. May 4, 2011 · Six years earlier, Robert Noyce, the founder of Fairchild Semiconductor, had patented the silicon chip. Now his ambitions had moved on and he was bringing together a team to help realise them.

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