mercoledì 18 febbraio 2026

Silicon Valley: Before, During and After


Silicon Valley: Before, During and After:  https://a.co/d/07fzHUvS 

It is tempting to believe that Silicon Valley appeared suddenly on a map south of San Francisco, an accident of geography, capital, and timing. It did not.

Silicon Valley is not a place. It is the visible outcome of a much longer human process: scientific intuition, technological audacity, spectacular failure, rivalry, risk, and persistence. Long before the name existed, the foundations were already being laid in laboratories where a crystal of germanium no larger than a fingernail held the promise of transforming the world.

This book is not an academic chronicle of electronics, nor a nostalgic celebration of innovation. It is a personal journey into the birth of the contemporary technological age—told from the perspective of someone who encountered it while it was still uncertain, fragile, and undefined. I did not meet Silicon Valley when it was legend. I met it when it was a collection of improvised workshops, industrial sheds, arguments about possibilities, and bold experiments that could easily have failed.

I witnessed the transistor evolve from laboratory curiosity to the fundamental building block of modern civilization. I saw integrated circuits replace entire cabinets of discrete components. I saw the microprocessor transform the computer from a military and industrial instrument into something personal—almost intimate.

But more than the devices, I saw the people. Scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, visionaries—often embodied in the same individual. I worked alongside them, shared projects, doubts, ambitions, and even family dinners. Innovation was never only technical; it was profoundly human.

At the center of this story stands the transistor, the “semi-metallic little monster,” modest in appearance yet revolutionary in consequence. From miniaturization and reliability to cost reduction, consumer electronics, the space race, and the emergence of the digital society, it became the silent protagonist of the second half of the twentieth century.

Yet the narrative extends beyond technology. It touches deeper questions: the relationship between complexity and intelligence, the difference between computation and consciousness, the meaning of Moore’s Law and its limits, and the uncertain boundary between what machines can simulate and what remains uniquely human.

Silicon Valley, in the end, is not a location. It is a chapter in a much larger human story, one that is still being written.

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