this wound up in my spam box
On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 8:24 PM, Christian Liendo <
christian_liendo at yahoo.com> wrote:
 http://m.cacm.acm.org/news/194192-in-memoriam-gene-amdahl-1922-2015/fulltext
 Gene Amdahl, who formulated Amdahl's Law and worked with IBM and others on
 developments related to mainframe computing, died recently from
 complications of pneumonia.
 American computer architect and high-tech entrepreneur Gene Myron Amdahl
 died Tuesday at the age of 92.
 Amdahl?s wife Marian said he had suffered from Alzheimer?s disease for
 about five years, before succumbing to pneumonia. "We are thankful for his
 kind spirit and brilliant mind.  He was a devout Christian and a loving
 father and husband. I was blessed with having him as my husband and my best
 friend.  I praise God for His faithfulness to us for more than 69 years."
 Born to immigrant parents in South Dakota, Amdahl served in the U.S. Navy
 during World War II. He completed a bachelor?s degree in engineering
 physics at South Dakota State University in 1948 and went on to study
 theoretical physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he
 received his doctorate in 1952.
 Amdahl joined IBM in 1952, where he worked on the IBM 704, the IBM 709,
 and then the Stretch project, the basis for the IBM 7030. He left IBM in
 1955 but returned in 1960 and became chief architect of the System/360
 mainframe computer. Amdahl was named an IBM Fellow in 1965, as well as head
 of the IBM Advanced Computing Systems Laboratory in Menlo Park, CA. He left
 IBM again in 1970 and set up Amdahl Corporation, which specialized in IBM
 mainframe-compatible computer products, with the help of Fujitsu.
 The company manufactured "plug-compatible" mainframes, starting in 1975
 with the Amdahl 470V/6, a less-expensive, more-reliable, faster alternative
 to IBM?s System 370/168. Amdahl's software team developed Virtual
 Machine/Performance Enhancement (VM/PE) software to optimize the
 performance of IBM's Multiple Virtual Storage (MVS) operating system when
 running under IBM's VM operating system. Within four years, the corporation
 had sold more than $1 billion of V6 and V7 mainframes and had more than
 6,000 employees worldwide.
 At ACM's Spring Joint Computer Conference in 1967, Amdahl participated  in
 a discussion on future architectural trends, arguing for performance
 limitations in any special feature or mode introduced to new machines. This
 resulted in what came to be known as Amdahl?s Law regarding sequential vs.
 parallel processing.
 Amdahl left his company in 1979 to set up Trilogy Systems, an organization
 aimed at designing an integrated chip for even cheaper mainframes. When the
 chip development failed within months of the company's $60-million public
 offering, Trilogy focused on developing its VLSI technology, which also did
 not do well. In 1985 Trilogy was merged into microcomputer manufacturer
 Elxsi (now Tata Elxsi), but poor results there had Amdahl leaving in 1989
 for a company he founded in 1987 to produce mid-sized mainframes, Andor
 International, which had been driven into bankruptcy by production problems
 and strong competition by 1995.
 In 1996 Amdahl co-founded Commercial Data Servers, again developing
 mainframe-like machines but this time with new super-cooled processor
 designs and aimed at physically smaller systems. The company, now known as
 Xbridge Systems, develops software to scan mainframe datasets and database
 tables for sensitive information such as credit card numbers, government
 identification numbers, and medical diagnosis information.
 In November 2004, Amdahl was appointed to the board of advisors of
 Massively Parallel Technologies, a Scottsdale, AZ, software engineering
 firm.
 Amdahl was a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the
 recipient of honorary doctorates from four institutions. He also was the
 recipient of the IEEE?s  Harry H. Goode Memorial Award, a Fellow of the
 Computer History Museum, and recipient of the ACM Special Interest Group on
 Design Automation (SIGDA) Pioneering Achievement Award.
 Said David Patterson, a professor of computer sciences at the University
 of California, Berkeley, and a computer pioneer in his own right, "The IBM
 System/360 was one of the greatest computer architectures of all time,
 being both a tremendous technical success and business success. It invented
 a computer family, which we would call binary compatibility today. When he
 left to form his own company, his mainframes were binary compatible with
 the System/360."
 Patterson noted the brief paper Amdahl submitted to ACM?s Spring Joint
 Computer Conference "basically offering a critique to enthusiasts about the
 parallel supercomputers of the era." He cited the beginning of that paper
 as laying out the arguments for what became  Amdahl's Law: