Fairchild Semiconductor introduced the first commercially available integrated circuit (released shortly before one from Texas Instruments), and would go on to become one of the major players in the evolution of Silicon Valley in the 1960s. The company currently employs roughly ten thousand people worldwide, with locations in San José, California, Salt Lake City, Utah, Bucheon, Korea, and Cebu, Mountaintop ,PA, among others. In South Portland, Maine, the corporate headquarters is located in the Maine Mall area, about a third of a mile from the manufacturing plant.
Only a year later the staff was already fed up with Shockley's increasingly bizarre behavior. In one famous incident Shockley's secretary accidentally cut her finger and he became convinced it was a plot against him. He then ordered everyone in the company to take a lie detector test to track down the culprit. It was later demonstrated she had cut herself on a broken thumbtack and Shockley calmed down, but the damage was already done.* This had proven to be a decisive example to several key personnel of Shockley's increasing paranoia, and a group of eight engineers decided they had had enough.
The group, later known widely as the Traitorous Eight, decided they had reason enough to resign, and all did so. The eight men were Julius Blank, Victor Grinich, Jean Hoerni, Eugene Kleiner, Jay Last, Gordon Moore, Robert Noyce, and Sheldon Roberts. Looking for funding on their own project, they turned to Sherman Fairchild's Fairchild Camera and Instrument, an Eastern U.S. company with considerable military contracts. In 1957 Fairchild Semiconductor was started with plans on making silicon transistors — at the time germanium was still a common material for semiconductor use.
Their first transistors were soon on the market, and the first batch of 100 was sold to IBM for $150 a piece. However, only two years later they had managed to build a circuit with four transistors on a single wafer of silicon, thereby creating the first silicon integrated circuit. (Texas Instruments' Jack Kilby had developed an integrated circuit made of germanium on September 12, 1958, and was awarded a U.S. patent). The company grew from twelve to twelve thousand employees, and was soon making $130 million a year.
During the 1960s, Fairchild dominated the analog integrated circuit market, introducing the first IC operational amplifiers, or "op amps", Bob Widlar's µA702 (in 1964) and µA709. In 1968, Fairchild introduced David Fullagar's µA741, which became the most popular IC op amp of all time.
During the 1960s many of the original founders would leave Fairchild to strike out on their own. Known as the "fairchildren", they formed many of the companies that grew to prominence in the 1970s. A Fairchild advertisement of the time showed a collage of the logos of Silicon Valley with the annotation "We started it all.". Among the last of the original founders to leave were Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore, who left in 1968 to form Intel. At this point much of the brainpower of the company was gone.
Intel would soon introduce its microprocessor, which Fairchild only copied, poorly, after a few years as the Fairchild F8. Their original huge lead was now squandered. By the end of the 1970s they had no new products in the pipeline, and increasingly turned to niche markets with their existing product line, notably "hardened" integrated circuits for military and space applications.
For a time, the company played a leading role in the development of integrated circuits using bipolar technology. These circuits were used worldwide, notably in Cray supercomputers.
Fairchild also lead the way in the development of digital imaging. In 1973 they were the first to produce a commercial Charge-coupled device following up on the invention at Bell Labs. In 1976 the company released the first video game system to use ROM cartridges, the Channel F.
In the 1970s Fairchild increasingly turned to "high end" customers, and thereby lost out in the developing microprocessor market. In 1979, Fairchild was purchased by Schlumberger Limited, an oil field services company. By the late 1980s the company was in a relatively-weak competitive position; Schlumberger sold Fairchild to National Semiconductor in 1987.*
In 1997 Fairchild Semiconductor was reborn as an independent company, based in South Portland, Maine. In 1999 Fairchild Semiconductor again became a publicly traded company on the New York Stock Exchange with the ticker symbol FCS. Fairchild's South Portland, Maine location is the longest continuously operating semiconductor manufacturing facility in the world.
More recently, Fairchild has expanded its semiconductor manufacturing to include a foundry service for advanced MEMS devices and products.
Fairchild's current product line is aimed at the power and discrete component market, claiming the ability to supply every single semiconductor component required for a typical switched-mode power supply from controller chip to switching MOSFET to rectifier diodes to optocouplers.
In 2004, Fairchild management began outsourcing its corporate infrastructure jobs to Singapore and Malaysia in a desperate attempt to shore up a falling bottom line while continuing to bolster Executive Officer salaries and perks. Fairchild currently trades below its initial offering of $18.75 per share.
The resulting clean up lasted over 15 years while the manufacturing plant sat abandoned and decrepit, attracting everyone from the homeless who used it as a place to sleep, to graffiti artists to the just plain curious. The many nooks and empty stairways provided a veritable urban playground for many paintball players.
In the early nineties a push was made by local residents to have the building demolished. In 1996 the abandoned Fairchild Semiconductor plant was finally razed and was made into a shopping center. Nothing remains of the plant and there is nothing to mark its previous location.
EPA *
Electronics companies of the United States
Fairchild Semiconductor | Fairchild Semiconductor | フェアチャイルド (半導体) | 仙童半导体公司
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