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Encyclopedia > Lynn Conway

Lynn Conway is a U.S. computer scientist and inventor. She worked at IBM in the 1960s and is credited with the invention of generalised dynamic instruction handling.


Conway was fired by IBM in 1968 after revealing to them that she was a transsexual; and was planning on transitioning to a female gender role. She was treated by Harry Benjamin himself. She had made an earlier transition attempt in the late 1950s that failed due to the medical climate at the time.


After losing her IBM job and access to her children, she started again from the ground up, stealth, as a contract programmer. She joined Xerox PARC in 1973, where she worked on VLSI design. With Carver Mead she co-authored Introduction to VLSI Systems, a groundbreaking work that would later become a standard textbook.


In the early 1980s Conway worked for DARPA on strategic computing, and then became a Professor at the University of Michigan in 1985. She decided to out herself as a transsexual again in 1999, after she realised that the story of her IBM work might soon come out. Since then she has been a prominent spokesperson for rights of transsexuals.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Lynn Conway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (213 words)
Lynn Conway is a U.S. computer scientist and inventor.
Conway was fired by IBM in 1968 after revealing to them that she was a transsexual; and was planning on transitioning to a female gender role.
In the early 1980s Conway worked for DARPA on strategic computing, and then became a Professor at the University of Michigan in 1985.
Visual Communications--Bio for Lynn Conway (701 words)
Lynn Conway is widely known as a pioneer of microelectronics, having innovated basic methods used world-wide for VLSI chip design, and having invented methods that have enabled rapid prototyping of VLSI chips for a whole generation of designers.
Lynn began her career working on the architecture and design of very high-performance digital computers as a Member of the Research Staff at IBM Research, Yorktown Heights, New York, after earning her BS ('62) and MSEE ('63) degrees at the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Columbia University.
As a result of her contributions, Lynn Conway has received many awards, including the prestigious Pender Award of the Moore School and Wetherill Medal of the Franklin Institute, and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1989.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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