Steve Chen (computer engineer)
Steve Chen is a Taiwanese computer engineer and internet entrepreneur.Life
Chen earned a BS from National Taiwan University in 1966. MS from Villanova University in 1971 and a PhD under David Kuck from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1975.
From 1975 through 1978 he worked for Burroughs Corporation on the design of the Burroughs large systems line of supercomputers.
He is best known as the principal designer of the Cray X-MP and Cray Y-MP multiprocessor supercomputers. Chen left Cray Research in September 1987 after it dropped the MP line.
With IBM's financial support, Chen founded Supercomputer Systems Incorporated in January 1988.
SSI was devoted to development of the SS-1 supercomputer, which was nearly completed before the estimated $150 million investment ran out. The Eau Claire, Wisconsin-based company went bankrupt in early 1993, leaving more than 300 employees jobless.
An attempt to salvage the work was made by forming a new company, SuperComputer International, later that year. SCI was renamed Chen Systems in 1995. It was acquired by Sequent Computer Systems the following year. John Markoff, a technology journalist, wrote in the New York Times that Chen was considered "one of the nation's most brilliant supercomputer designers while working in this country for the technology pioneer Seymour Cray in the 1980s."
In 1999, Chen became founder and CEO of Galactic Computing, a developer of supercomputing blade systems, based in Shenzhen, China.
By 2005 he started to focus on grid computing to model a human brain instead.
By 2010, he was reported to be working on technology to use cloud computing to improve health care in rural China.
In 2011, he founded Information Supergrid Technologies USA.
According to Chinese media reports, during 2012, Chen failed to make salary payments to the employees of his company in Beijing, which later went bankrupt. The employees later sued Chen, trying to get their salary.
Chen was elected to the US National Academy of Engineering in 1991.