From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "User:David"

 
(11 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Hello and welcome to WikiChip!'''
 
'''Hello and welcome to WikiChip!'''
  
 +
I'm David Schor. I founded, I run, & I maintain ''WikiChip''. If you have any specific questions for me, please use [[User talk:David|my talk page]].
  
I'm David and I run & maintain WikiChip in my spare time. If you have any specific questions for me, please use [[User talk:David|my talk page]]. For general wikichip discussions, please use the [[WikiChip:general discussion]] page.
+
[https://twitter.com/david_schor You can find me on twitter too].
  
I'm a computer engineer. My expertise include [[microprocessor]] [[microarchitecture]] development, [[logic design]], low-level and high-level software optimization, and parallelism. I'm also a chip collector!
 
  
 +
'''WikiChip?'''
  
'''WikiChip?'''
+
Before starting WikiChip, information about chips (specifically older chips) was sparse, confusing, and incomplete. And if you did find info about some old chip, it was usually some very basic specs. I wanted more! I wanted a place where you could look up a chip and get all the info you wanted. And if you wanted to feed your curiosity further, you'd be able to look up further info about the designer or manufacturer, manufacturing process, and the underlying microarchitecture. That's exactly why I started WikiChip. I started WikiChip as a platform to document all those less common or downright unknown technologies (computers, chips, etc..) as well as to thoroughly and accurately document vintage as well as modern computer systems and chip models; then go a step further and document their fab process and their architectures.
  
 +
'''Contact'''
  
Before starting WikiChip, information about chips (specifically older chips) was sparse, confusing, and incomplete. And if you did find info about some old chip, it was usually some very basic specs. I wanted more! I wanted a place where you could look up a chip and get all the info you wanted. And if you wanted to feed your curiosity further, you'd be able to look up further info about the designer or manufacturer, manufacturing process, and the underlying microarchitecture. That's exactly why I started WikiChip. I started WikiChip as a platform to document all those less common or downright unknown technologies (computers, chips, etc..) as well as to thoroughly and accurately document vintage as well as modern computer systems and chip models; then go a step further and document their fab process and their architectures.
+
You can contact me at <math>\text{david}[\text{at}]\text{wikichip.org}</math>

Latest revision as of 22:05, 13 May 2020

Hello and welcome to WikiChip!

I'm David Schor. I founded, I run, & I maintain WikiChip. If you have any specific questions for me, please use my talk page.

You can find me on twitter too.


WikiChip?

Before starting WikiChip, information about chips (specifically older chips) was sparse, confusing, and incomplete. And if you did find info about some old chip, it was usually some very basic specs. I wanted more! I wanted a place where you could look up a chip and get all the info you wanted. And if you wanted to feed your curiosity further, you'd be able to look up further info about the designer or manufacturer, manufacturing process, and the underlying microarchitecture. That's exactly why I started WikiChip. I started WikiChip as a platform to document all those less common or downright unknown technologies (computers, chips, etc..) as well as to thoroughly and accurately document vintage as well as modern computer systems and chip models; then go a step further and document their fab process and their architectures.

Contact

You can contact me at Equation david left-bracket at right-bracket wikichip period org