Friday                                     **Special Time and Location**
March 14
2:00 - 3:30 PM
Covell 216

Thomas H. Lee,
Professor
Stanford University

Bio:

Thomas H. Lee received the S.B., S.M. and Sc.D. degrees in electrical 
engineering, all from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983,

1985, and 1990, respectively.

He joined Analog Devices in 1990 where he was primarily engaged in the 
design of high-speed clock recovery devices. In 1992, he joined Rambus 
Inc. in Mountain View, CA where he developed high-speed analog circuitry

for 500 megabyte/s CMOS DRAMs.

He has also contributed to the development of PLLs in the StrongARM,
Alpha 
and AMD K6/K7/K8 microprocessors. Since 1994, he has been a Professor of

Electrical Engineering at Stanford University where his research focus
has 
been on gigahertz-speed wireline and wireless integrated circuits built
in 
conventional silicon technologies, particularly CMOS.

He has twice received the "Best Paper" award at the International 
Solid-State Circuits Conference, co-authored a "Best Student Paper" at 
ISSCC, was awarded the Best Paper prize at CICC, and is a Packard 
Foundation Fellowship recipient.

He is an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer of both the Solid-State Circuits
and 
Microwave Societies. He holds 35 U.S. patents and authored The Design of

CMOS Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits (now in its second edition),
and 
Planar Microwave Engineering, both with Cambridge University Press. He
is 
a co-author of four additional books on RF circuit design, and also 
cofounded Matrix Semiconductor.
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