Lee Boysel
American electrical engineer and entrepreneur
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lee Loren Boysel (December 31, 1938 – April 25, 2021[1]) was an American electrical engineer and entrepreneur. While at Fairchild Semiconductor, he developed four-phase logic and built the first integrated circuit with over 100 logic gates, and designed the Fairchild 3800 / 3804 8-bit ALUs.[2] Boysel designed the Four-Phase Systems AL1.[3] He founded Four-Phase Systems to commercialize the technology, and sold the company to Motorola in 1981.
BSEE 1962
Lee Boysel | |
|---|---|
| Born | December 31, 1938 |
| Died | April 25, 2021 (aged 82) |
| Education | MSEE 1963 BSEE 1962 |
| Alma mater | University of Michigan |
| Occupations | Entrepreneur Business executive Electrical engineer Investor |
| Known for | Founder of Four-Phase Systems, Inc. |
| Awards | University of Michigan Electrical & Computer Engineering Merit Award (2007) |
He was a graduate of the University of Michigan.
Litigation
Texas Instruments claimed to have patented the microprocessor and, in response, Boysel assembled a system in which a single 8-bit AL1 was used as part of a courtroom demonstration computer system, together with ROM, RAM and an input-output device.[4]