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  1. Stanley Mazor is an American microelectronics engineer. He is one of the co-inventors of the world's first microprocessor architecture, the Intel 4004, together with Ted Hoff, Masatoshi Shima, and Federico Faggin.

  2. Stanley Mazor is a software engineer who co-developed the world's first microprocessor, the 4004, with Faggin, Hoff and Shima in 1971. He received the 1997 Kyoto Prize in Advanced Technology for his contribution to the creation of new industries and the progress of modern society.

  3. In 1984, Mazor joined Silicon Compiler Systems, and in 1993, then working at Synopsys, he published a book on chip design language entitled A Guide to VHDL. Over the course of his career, Mazor has also published fifty articles. Currently, Mazor is the Training Director of BEA Systems.

  4. Born Oct. 22, 1941. Stanley Mazor was instrumental in refining the architecture of the single-chip CPU. This first working microprocessor was smaller than a thumbnail yet had as much computing power as ENIAC, the first electronic computer, which filled 3,000 cubic feet.

  5. www.computerhistory.org › profile › stan-mazorStan Mazor - CHM

    Jul 1, 2024 · Stan Mazor was born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1941. He studied mathematics at San Francisco State University. In 1964, Mazor joined Fairchild Semiconductor in Mountain View, California, first as a programmer, then as a computer designer in the digital research department.

  6. Stanley Mazor was one of the four engineers who developed the world's first microprocessor, the 4004. He gave a lecture on "Improvements in IC's and Design Tools" at the Kyoto Prize Workshop in 1997.

  7. Stanley Mazor. Innovator. San Francisco State University. Before there was silicon in Silicon Valley and back when a successful "start-up" meant that your car turned over, Stanley Mazor was a San Francisco State math major intrigued by the university's only computer—an IBM 1620.