Glenn Henry (IT entrepreneur)
Glenn Henry (né Gaylord Glenn Henry; born July 26, 1942 Berkeley, California), is an American computer industry executive, cofounder of Centaur Technology, and inventor of computer technology at the advent and frontier era of the development of personal computers. He holds over 300 US patents.[1][2]
Glenn Henry | |
---|---|
Born | Berkeley, California, U.S. | July 26, 1942
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | California State University, East Bay |
Occupation | Cofounder of Centaur Technology Senior Vice President, Dell Computers |
Career
Henry started his business career at IBM, where he worked for 21 years until 1988.[3] He was the instigator, lead architect and development manager responsible for the IBM System/32, IBM System/38 (forerunner of AS/400), and IBM RT PC (forerunner of Power systems).[4] He was appointed an IBM Fellow in 1985.
He went to work for Dell in 1988 as the company's first VP of R&D.[5][6][7] In 1993 he was Dell's Senior Vice President in charge of products. While working there, he discovered that it was not possible to buy computer processors for less than $160 wholesale, thereby constraining the ultimate retail price of the resulting computer.[7] In 1994 Henry left Dell and began working on a new Intel compatible design. Funding for this new processor was provided by IDT. His work lead to the foundation of Centaur Technology Inc. Centaur's first processor came to market in 1997. The company was subsequently bought by VIA Technologies in 1999.
Henry was the President of Centaur Technology until his partial retirement in 2019 (he still works part-time remotely). In addition to his management duties, he wrote microcode for the company's Intel compatible processors, and he designed hardware for several co-processors.
Honors
In 1985 Henry was named an IBM Fellow.[4] In 2016 Henry was named a "Distinguished Alumni" of California State University. In 2017 the Computer History Museum added Henry's oral history to their "key pioneers and contributors" history collection.
Education
In 1966, Henry earned a BS degree in mathematics from California State University, Hayward. The following year he earned a MS degree in mathematics.[2]
References
- "List showing approximately 200 Patents by Glenn Henry," Internet FAQ Archives, Advameg, Inc. (Illinois) (retrieved April 17, 2015)
- "CPU Veteran Lobbies for Cheap PCs," EE Times, September 12, 2005
- Frank G. Soltis (2001). Fortress Rochester: The Inside Story of the IBM ISeries. Loveland, Colorado: 29th Street Press. p. 378. ISBN 1-58304-083-8. OCLC 55235488.
- "CEO Interview Glenn Henry founder of VIA Processor Subsidiary Centaur," by Rick Lehrbaum, LinuxDevices.com, June 9, 2004
- "Barriers & Solutions to High-performance x86 Processing" (seminar abstract), Computer Architecture Abstracts, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Department of Computer Science; University of Texas at Austin, Spring 1999
- Charles H. Ferguson; Charles R. Morris (1993). Computer Wars: The Post-IBM World. Beard Books. p. 63. ISBN 1-58798-139-4. OCLC 50164489.
- Al Reinert (September 1992). "Revenge of the Nerd". Texas Monthly. Vol. 20 no. 9. pp. 122, 160.
External links
Further reading
- Henry, Glenn (June 9, 2004). "CEO Interview: Glenn Henry, founder of VIA processor subsidiary Centaur". Linux Devices (Interview). Interviewed by Rick Lehrbaum. Archived from the original on June 12, 2004.