Intel's third employee was Andy Grove, a chemical engineer, who later ran the company through much of the 1980s and the high-growth 1990s.
Andy Grove, Intel's chief executive at the time, is widely admired in the computer industry for being a fierce but gracious competitor.
In today's hypercompetitive world, it's easy to believe that Andy Grove is right, and that only the paranoid survive.
Andy Grove has taken to this with a religious zeal; everyone is aligned on this issue.
Andy Grove was a great supporter of the Princeton Team during its term of operation.
Andy Grove argues that energy independence is a flawed and infeasible objective, particularly in a network of integrated global exchange.
I remember talking with Andy Grove, and he was so mad that Microsoft wasn't supporting the 64-bit capabilities of their processors.
Andy Grove blamed the i860's failure in the marketplace on Intel being stretched too thin:
Sometimes, as Andy Grove demonstrated, the show involves sitting in a cubicle just like everyone else.
"How could a museum director know Andy Grove?"