
When I visited the Everspin spinout of Freescale yesterday, it seemed eerily familiar. Sure, I was born in Phoenix, so visiting the Chandler suburb and the temperature shift from outdoors to air conditioning brought back memories.
But there was something about the stark brightness of the wafer fab corridors. It reminded me of my first real job, at 17, when I got a job at Mostek, the largest DRAM manufacturer at the time. I was testing final product, and they had just introduced ZRAM, a nonvolatile memory consisting of a DRAM chip with a battery on top of the package. Ironically, it is a modern variant of that, battery-backed SRAM, that Everspin is replacing today (with magnetic non-volatile MRAM).
But that wasn’t it.
Then it hit me. Freescale is the semi fab that spun out of Motorola. The reason that I am a U.S. citizen (instead of Canadian, like all of my relatives) is that Motorola brought my Dad to the Phoenix area as they were entering the new industry of integrated circuits. I was born soon afterward. My earliest memories of visiting him at work included a tour of the drafting tables where the ruby lith was cut by hand with Exacto knives (for mask making in the early days of photolithography).
My Dad convinced the nascent team at Motorola that he knew about photolithography because he knew about photography… a tenuous connection at best… but life takes strange turns sometimes.
And it happened on my birthday no less. =)

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