Address: 
33A Drève de la Meute
1410 Waterloo
Belgium
Institution: 
University of Louvain
Phone Country Code: 
00 3
Phone Home: 
02 3549663
Fax: 
02 32 2 3549
Bio: 
After a brief stint as a lawyer, Armand Van Dormael was for 25 years in charge of the European buying offices of Sears Roebuck. Having lived through several monetary crises, he decided to take early retirement and study monetary history. His first book, Bretton Woods: Birth of a Monetary System remains a worldwide bestseller. The Power of Money relates the collision between sovereign states and global economic forces for the control of global finance. Several years ago, he needed a new computer and found that the European electronics companies had given up production. This prompted him to investigate the cause of their demise. To his surprise, he discovered that the program-controlled electromechanical computer, the commercial computer, the transistor, the transistor radio, the microcomputer and the www originated in Europe. Eminent historians have drawn attention to the gaps they detected in the history of computing. History books have covered every phase and aspect of semiconductor science and computer technology as it developed in the United States. But the history of computing is still a tale largely untold. The pioneering breakthroughs by German and French scientists are practically unknown. The Silicon Revolution tries to fill the gap. The book traces the theoretical foundations of computing, from Leibniz’s algorithms to the invention of the transistor and of the microcomputer. Since hardly any literature is available, it refers mainly to published company histories, newspaper and magazine articles. The author came to know Herbert Mataré who, in 1953, developed the first functional transistors for the French government. He moved to the United States, but was careful not to mention his invention. Fifty years later, the NY Times brought his name to public attention. In April 1972, the release of the 8008 microprocessor inaugurated the era of integrated electronics. François Gernelle used the component to build the Micral, the world’s first microcomputer. He set up a production company, but was unable to compete. After the War, European governments watched American companies take control of their markets. Convinced that research and development should be fostered through a European industrial policy, huge subsidies were granted to five “national champions”. The industry became dependent on subsidies, tariffs and other defensive strategies. Unable to compete globally, within a few years it was extinct, leaving the market to American and Asian companies. In 1980, IBM brought together Intel and Microsoft and established the IBM PC de-facto standard. Intel supplies the chips and Microsoft the word processing program. Over the years, they established a standard-based quasi-monopoly by running a treadmill of product obsolescence and upgrades. They keep their dominance, while making a graceful transition from one standard to another.
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