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Ray and Maria are life trustees of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. [25] In 1999, Ray and Maria Stata endowed the music director chair position. [26] Ray Stata is a member of the Board of Directors for Nano-C, a leading producer of patented nanostructured carbon, including fullerenes and single-walled nanotubes. “Fundamental technology ...
[32] [33] Investment also came from American entrepreneur Ray Stata of Analog Devices, Blackbird Ventures, Main Sequence Ventures, Right Click Capital, Kim Jackson and her husband Scott Farquhar through Skip Capital, Lucy and Malcolm Turnbull; and Uniseed, the venture fund of UniSuper. This tranche totalled A$42 million. [2] [33]
The company was founded by two MIT graduates, Ray Stata and Matthew Lorber in 1965. [9] The same year, the company released its first product, the model 101 op amp, [10] which was a hockey-puck sized module used in test and measurement equipment. [11] In 1967, the company published the first issue of its technical magazine, Analog Dialogue. [12]
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Ray Stata (B.S. 1958, M.S. 1958) – founder of Analog Devices; Lisa Su (B.S. 1990, M.S. 1991, PhD 1994) – CEO of Advanced Micro Devices; Eric Swanson – co-founder of Sycamore Networks; Theodore Tso – Google software engineer, maintainer of the ext4 filesystem; Philippe Villers (M.S. 1960) – founder of Computervision, which is now part ...
Ray Stata (Left) and Jerry Fishman (right) Jerald G. Fishman (1945 - March 28, 2013) [1] was an American electrical engineer and businessman. He served as Chief Executive Officer and President of Analog Devices since November 1996 until his death in March 2013. [2]
After finishing his Ph.D., Stata worked for Digital Equipment Corporation's Systems Research Center, where he contributed to the AltaVista search engine. [3] He was an assistant professor of Computer Science at the Baskin School of Engineering at UC Santa Cruz, and collaborated with the Internet Archive.
Stata Center, officially the Ray and Maria Stata Center and sometimes referred to as Building 32, is a 430,000-square-foot (40,000 m 2) academic complex designed by architect Frank Gehry for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The building opened for initial occupancy on March 16, 2004.