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"Living in the Silicon Valley, if you do
not do a startup, then something is wrong with
you," says , Vinod Dham, when asked why he
left a high-profile career in Intel after
having successfully completed the Pentium
project. "In 1995, I was 45 and facing a
midlife crisis. I could have ridden a Harley
Davidson, or gone bungee jumping or done a
startup. Since I am a pretty conservative guy
I chose the last," he laughs.
From the hills near Rawalpindi to the Valley,
the Dhams have gone through a fascinating
journey. Coming to India during Partition as
refugees, Dham's father joined the army as a
civilian. Dham was born in Pune (across the
railway station in Cowasji Hospital, says Dham)
as his father was posted there. His early
education was in Pune and Dham considers
himself a Puneite, speaking fluent Marathi.
After his bachelors in Electrical Engineering from the Delhi College of
Engineering, in 1971, Dham wanted to go
abroad and study microelectronics. However,
his parents wanted him to be with them in
Delhi. " At that time, career and such things
did not enter my mind. There was simply no
protest, I accepted it," recalls Dham. Yet, he
was lucky to be 10 minutes away from a
forward-looking entrepreneur, Gurpreet Singh
of Continental Devices, who wanted to run a
world-class semiconductor company in the
outskirts of Delhi. "Though Sardarji, as we
used to call him, was not a techie - he was an
economist from the London School of Economics
- he was very aware that in semiconductors lay
the future. He was collecting bright people
from places like Berkeley and Stanford. He had
met Gordon Moore. Robert Noyce had even come
and stayed in his house in Maharani Bagh, in
the late '60s, since Noyce wanted Intel to
start chip manufacturing in India," says Dham.
Dham wanted to know what went on inside the
devices. And so, after convincing his parents,
he went to Cincinnati in 1975 to do an MS EE
in Solid State Sciences. Cincinnati, at that
time, was a very good school in
microelectronics with even a fab on campus and
was widely supported by the semiconductor
industry.
After MS Dham went to Dayton and joined MCR.
"It was cold and lonely but I got my green
card and work experience. I got some patents
from the work I did there. I was presenting it
in a IEEE conference in Monterrey, California.
The Intel people were also there presenting
their work and they said they wanted me to
join them. While in Continental Devices I had
read about Gordon Moore, Robert Noyce and all
that in the technology magazines but they were
asking questions like how PhDs would run a
business. It was fascinating. Of course, I
joined as a lowly engineer. I worked on EPROMS
(I was a co-inventor of flash memory) for
seven years," recalls Dham.
However, Dham wanted more action and started
looking around. At that time, the 386 chip had
been designed and had gone for production.
Dham wanted to get into microprocessors, he
applied for a job in that division but he was
rejected since the project was on course. That
would not deter a determined Dham. He went
nosing around and found that there were
problems in production. The fab thought may be
it was at fault and was cleaning up its shop,
the designers were at tethers end after
several redesigns and Dham thought he could
lick the problem. He went to the programme
manager and told him that he would act as his
consultant and need not be given a formal
position. When Dham straightened out the
problem, Intel's fortunes shot up and the boss
was happy. So he made him in charge of 386 and
went on to 486 himself. "But 386 was now
mature and there was not much excitement." It
so turned out that he was then shifted to 486
since his former boss had quit. However 486
was in deep trouble, the fab was ready, the
chip had been announced to go one up on
competitors but there were numerous problems
at all levels. "I worked so hard I thought I
died, but finally I finished the project in
November 1989. I took a month off to India to
unwind and came back in January 1990 and was
made incharge of 586 or Pentium," says Dham.
Pentium was a challenge in many ways; 486 was
more integration than innovation. Paranoia was
absolutely at the top. "It was not easy at
that time. The first six months was foundation
laying. We also started bringing multi-scalar
architecture. I picked Avtar Saini to execute
the design. He was a go-getter and executed
very well. The whole team did a great job. The
biggest challenges came in business. The big
customers like IBM and Compaq were very happy
selling 486. But we wanted to stay one
generation ahead of competition. But, our
customers were not ready. Luckily CD-ROM
prices crashed and became affordable for home
PCs. We had a bus called PCI and we could put
graphics, audio and video as well as games on
a home computer using Pentium, and then
position ourselves ahead of 486. We picked
ourselves a new horse called Packard Bell,
which nobody in the corporate market had heard
of. They started selling to CompUSA, Circuit
City, Best Buy, Good Guy and all the retail
stores. I used to go with my team to demos
with 486 and Pentium to show how Pentium was
better than 486. They were getting it only
from Packard Bell and they asked Compaq and
Dell: "Where is your Pentium machine?" Pentium
became a huge success for Intel and Dham left
Intel in 1995, riding on its success.
"The best thing that happened to me was
joining Intel and the best thing that happened
to me was leaving Intel," says Dham in one
of his crisp sound bytes that make him so
popular with journalists.
He joined Nexgen, which was a startup that was
acquired by AMD later. After helping AMD
seriously challenge Intel with its vastly
popular K6, Dham left AMD and joined Silicon
Spice, a startup, as chairman, president and
CEO though others had founded it. "It has been
the best part of my life, building teams,
products, raising money, talking to customers
and finally selling it to Broadcom, a company
which might become tomorrow's Cisco," he says.
Silicon Spice has been acquired by Broadcom
for $1.2 billion and everybody, including some
office staff, have become millionaires.
Photographs and certificates from Andy Grove
and Craig Barret about 386, 486 and Pentium
adorn Dham's office walls as well as one from
Bill Clinton for being the presidential
advisor on minorities. Noticeably his latest
chip, Calisto - its very first copy that
passed all tests - lies at the feet of a small
Ganapati statue on his table.
Dham's favourite hobby is carpentry and his
favourite TV show is Home Improvement. 'Tool
Man' Tim Taylor's Do It Yourself does not
quite work. This hi-tech craftsman's chips
sure do. |