George Clifford Sziklai
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George Clifford Sziklai | |
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Born | |
Died | September 9, 1998 | (aged 89)
Occupation | Inventor, Electrical Engineer |
George Clifford Sziklai (July 9, 1909 in Budapest, Hungary – September 9, 1998 in Los Altos, California, U.S.) was a Hungarian-American renowned electronics engineer,[1] who among many other contributions to radio and TV electronics invented the transistor configuration named after him, the Sziklai pair.
Educated at the University of Budapest and the Technical University Munich, Sziklai emigrated to New York in 1930. His long career included stations at Radio Corporation of America and Westinghouse Electric Corporation before he joined Lockheed's Palo Alto Research Laboratory in 1967.[1]
Sziklai, who held some 160 patents including color television transmission, is also credited with constructing the first Image Orthicon television camera[1] and inventing a high-speed elevator.[citation needed]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Taaffe, Linda (September 22, 1998). "Electronics pioneer helped to invent TV". www.losaltosonline.com. Los Altos Town Crier. Retrieved March 27, 2015.
- Hungarian electrical engineers
- 20th-century Hungarian inventors
- 1909 births
- 1998 deaths
- Engineers from California
- People from Los Altos, California
- Technical University of Munich alumni
- 20th-century American engineers