Ivor Catt Explained

Ivor Catt (born 1935) is a British electronics engineer known principally for his alternative theories of electromagnetism.[1] He received a B.A. degree from Cambridge University, and has won the Electronic Design magazine's "best product of the year" award on 26 October 1989, after £16 million funding.

Biography

Ivor Catt was born in England and grew up on an RAF airbase in Singapore.[2] He left the country, along with his mother and sister, just before the Japanese invasion in 1942. He did his National Service stationed in Germany. He won a State Scholarship in mathematics and then studied engineering at Trinity College, Cambridge.

Wafer scale integration

Catt developed and patented some ideas on Wafer scale integration (WSI) in 1972, and published his work in Wireless World in 1981, after his articles on the topic were rejected by academic journals.[3] The technique, christened Catt Spiral, was designed to enable the use of partially faulty integrated chips (called partials), which were otherwise discarded by manufacturers.[4]

In the mid-1980s, a British company Anamartic, funded by Tandem Computers and Sir Clive Sinclair among others, announced plans to manufacture microchips ("superchips") based on Catt's technology.[5] [6] The approach was reported to be revolutionary at the time, with predictions that it would enable construction of powerful super-computers from cheap, mass-produced components, and cheaper and faster replacements for magnetic disk memories.[5] [7] Anamartic introduced a solid-state memory, called the Wafer Stack, based on the technology in 1989 and the device won Electronic Products 'Product of the Year Award'.[4] However the company could not ensure a large enough supply of silicon wafers, which were crucial for its chip manufacturing, and folded in 1992.

Writings and opinions

On industrial management

Catt spent six years in the 1960s working in five different electronics companies in the USA. He was very disillusioned by his experience and wrote a harsh critique of American management practices in his book, The Catt Concept: The New Industrial Darwinism. Catt was critical of the hire and fire culture, which he labeled the New Social Darwinism, and accused American employers of stifling their workers' creativity.[8] The book got largely negative reviews, with Kirkus Reviews describing it as a contrived and often muddled work that rested on "one man's bitter and limited experience."[9] Published in six languages.

Censorship claims

His work has received coverage and debate in the magazines Wireless World and Electronics World from December 1978 to September 1988. New Scientist on 19 February 1989 stated that Catt proposed an electronic internet to share ideas and circumvent bigoted censorship.[10]

Selected bibliography

Books

Self-Published

Articles by Ivor Catt

Articles Referring to Ivor Catt

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Index to Ivor Catt's work on Electromagnetic Theory. . Ivor Catt .
  2. Web site: What a Life ; Sydney Catt; Autobiography . ivorcatt.com . 1 August 2007.
  3. News: Schofield. Jack. Computer Guardian (Microfile): Catt's back. The Guardian. 16 February 1989.
  4. Cook. Nigel. Air Traffic Control: How many more air disasters?. Electronics World. January 2003 . 4 April 2008.
  5. News: Matthews. Robert. Breakthrough for British microchip; Anamartic; Wafer scale integration. The Times (London). 9 August 1988.
  6. BBC Micro Live News. 1985. BBC. 4 April 2008.
  7. News: Matthews. Robert. A first for UK; Supercomputers; Technology. The Times (London). 9 February 1989.
  8. Book: Catt, Ivor. The Catt Concept: The New Industrial Darwinism. Putnam Publ.. 1971.
  9. Review – The Catt Concept: The New Industrial Darwinism . 1 October 1971. Kirkus Reviews.
  10. News: Firth . Howard . Forum: On the importance of being creative – Innovative thinkers should be allowed to come to the fore . NewScientist . 1989-11-25 . 2021-11-17 .