Andrew S. Grove, Intel Chief Who Spurred Semiconductor Revolution, Dies at 79
By JONATHAN KANDELL
MARCH 21, 2016
Andrew S. Grove, the longtime chief executive and chairman of Intel Corporation who was one of the most acclaimed and influential personalities of the computer and Internet era, died on Monday at his home in Los Altos, Calif. He was 79.
The cause has not been determined, said Chuck Mulloy, a spokesman for the family.
At Intel, Mr. Grove helped midwife the semiconductor revolution the use of increasingly sophisticated chips to power computers that proved to be as momentous for economic and social development as hydrocarbon fuels, electricity and telephones were in earlier eras. Intels microprocessors were also essential for digital cameras, consumer electronic products, household appliances, toys, manufacturing equipment and a wide assortment of devices that depended on computerized functions.
Besides presiding over the development of Intels memory chips and microprocessors in laboratory research, Mr. Grove gained a reputation as a ruthlessly effective manager who spurred associates and cowed rivals in a cutthroat, high-tech business world where companies rose and fell at startling speed. Mr. Groves famous slogan, Only the Paranoid Survive, became the title of his 1996 best seller describing his management philosophy.
Adding to Mr. Groves appeal was his rags-to-riches immigrant story. A survivor of the Nazi Holocaust and the 1956 Soviet invasion of his native Hungary, he arrived in the United States as a penniless youth who spoke little English and suffered from severe hearing loss. Within decades, Mr. Grove was worth hundreds of millions of dollars. And in 1997, he was chosen Man of the Year by Time magazine as the person most responsible for the amazing growth in the power and the innovative potential of microchips.
Mr. Grove in some ways was considered the father of Silicon Valley, said David B. Yoffie, a professor of the Harvard Business School and longtime Intel board member. Mr. Groves influence, Mr. Yoffie said, came largely from his ideas about organizational practices and design Intel was the birthplace of non-hierarchical, open settings and low-partitioned cubicles rather than walled-in offices.
Mr. Groves work ethic, his personal drive and his notion of the value of creative confrontation became the managerial model for generations of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and executives like Apples co-founder Steven P. Jobs, who regularly sought Mr. Groves counsel, said Mr. Yoffie.
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