Fairchild Semiconductor
1. | The Traitorous Eight 01:51 |
2. | Moore Versus Noyce 02:48 |
3. | Ten Dollars 01:08 |
4. | We Won’t Even Have To Move 01:49 |
5. | Hoerni’s Planar Process 03:03 |
6. | The Undersigned 02:16 |
7. | There’s Nothing We Can’t Do 02:08 |
8. | Fairchild Semiconductor 02:50 |
9. | Silicon Not Germanium 02:48 |
10. | The 741 Will Do Okay 02:25 |
11. | We Want Your I.C. for Apollo 01:53 |
12. | The Fairchildren 02:32 |
13. | We Started It All 04:12 |
14. | The Traitorous Eight (Reprise) 02:40 |
FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR
This album is an extreme exercise in manifestation or perhaps overly-optimistic multiverse manipulation.
We do not live in a universe where there’s a lavish TV series about Fairchild Semiconductor. But we *should* and I want to do my utmost to make that universe this one.
Having spent hours researching various magazine articles, citations and physics way over my head, I’m more than a little obsessed by Fairchild and the long shadow that one company and all its Fairchildren cast over our lives today.
I’m the generation that lived through the ’80s tech revolution. I wasn’t clever enough to be a coder (no maths!) but I learned a bit of assembly language, wrote a few terrible ASCII-based games, the usual for a geeky kid of my generation. This is when I first started to be interested in processors, noticing that some home computers used something called a ‘6502’ and others a ‘Z80.’ Back then, I had no idea that one tech company had so influenced computer history, from developing the first monolithic integrated circuit to guiding us to the Moon.
I would love this album to inspire a real TV series that explored the personalities *and* the science of those times. Ideally, it would be a co-production between, say, Netflix and the BBC. There would be a one-hour dramatic show, telling the story and then a follow-up one-hour behind-the-science episode. I want people to know the fascinating history behind the last great industrial revolution, without which today’s inter-connected, inter-dependent world would be impossible.
Four transistors on the first ever monolithic IC in 1960, sixteen thousand million on Apple’s M1 chip in 2020. I want to hear that story!
Released May 19, 2021