Otto C.C. Lin Explained

Otto C.C. Lin
Native Name:林垂宙
Birth Place:Shantou, Guangdong, China

Otto Lin (born Chui Chau Lin (林垂宙) in 1938) is a researcher, academic, executive in the high-technology sector, and entrepreneurship advocate.

Early life and education

Otto Lin was born Chui Chau Lin (林垂宙) in Shantou, Guangdong, China, in 1938. He came to Hong Kong as a refugee and went to Taiwan in 1953 where education at the K-12 level was free. He attended National Taiwan University and received a BS in chemical engineering in 1960. After serving in the ROTC, he was admitted to the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana for post-graduate studies. Later he transferred to Columbia University in New York City, receiving a PhD in 1967 in chemistry. His doctoral research was on the relationship of macromolecular conformation and hydrodynamic properties of DNA.

1967: working at Du Pont on innovations in polymer rheology

Lin was recruited by Du Pont de Nemours and Company in Wilmington, Delaware to explore the role of rheology in polymer coatings. Working at both Marshall Laboratory in Philadelphia and the Experimental Station in Wilmington, he focused on developing polymer coating systems in compliance with air pollution control regulations gradually being introduced in the United States. His assignment was multi-faceted involving coordinating technical studies in polymer science, rheological design, application engineering and field services. Later the assignment was broadened to include electronic circuit products.

The Du Pont experience gave him insights on the pursuit of innovation in many leading U. S. corporations such as General Motors, General Electrics, IBM, AT&T, and Boeing. All were clients he would call to resolve application issues involving innovative Du Pont-trademarked materials. Later in 1987, when he attended the Advanced Management Program (AMP, Class 101) at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business,[1] he expounded the value of multi-disciplinary collaboration in problem-solving even for companies of competing interests.

1979-1982: building technology infrastructure in Taiwan

In 1979, Lin went to Taiwan on a sabbatical leave and was appointed professor and dean of the school of engineering at National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu. At the request of the National Science Council, chaired by Shien-Shiu Shu, he chaired an expert committee to lay out a blueprint for the development of polymer science and engineering which was a part of the industrial strategy to upgrade the productivity of the petrochemical clusters in Taiwan.

Concurrently, he was charged with managing the Tsing-Hua development of experimental electric vehicles, a pioneering R&D program aimed at lifting Taiwan's fuel efficiency and environmental protection in its petroleum-driven economy. Embarking on EV development in the early 1980s reflected the vision of the leadership of Chiang Ching-Kuo and his technocrat teams including Yuen-Hsuan Sun, Shien-Shiu Shu, and Kuo-Ting Li. The EV effort was later aborted due to the deficiency of lead acid battery technology and divergent social priorities. Nevertheless, it has paved Lin's research interests in a national innovation system where universities, technology institutes, business groups and national and regional government agencies collaborate for overall economic development.

He also played the role of advisor to the Hsinchu Science Based Industrial Park which was at its planning stage under the NSC. The park was designed to attract domestic and foreign entrepreneurs to implement their innovations. In the end, it has become the cradle of Taiwan's high-tech industry. By the year 2000, over 65% of the world production of microelectronic chips was manufactured by companies based at the Science Park.

1983: leading a new research lab in materials science

In 1982, the new Materials Research Laboratories (MRL) was established under the Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI)[2] and Lin was appointed as its founding director. But an illness kept him from coming on board until 1983, when he resigned from Du Pont and moved his family (wife Ada and 2 school-age children, Ann and Gene, and later Dean) to Hsin-Chu. He started thorough planning for MRL to position it as the future center of excellence in materials science and engineering for Taiwan. It consisted of 7 technical divisions: metallurgy, polymers, fine ceramics, opto-electronics, corrosion protection, sensor materials and systems, materials characterization and selection. Additionally, a large technical service group was established for services to the industries. He instituted programs in recruitment, international exchanges and training.

In the succeeding years, MRL was to become the birthplace of carbon fiber bicycles, high-strength specialty steels, flexible printed circuits, laser diodes, electronic ceramics and played a key role in nuclear power plant safety and maintenance. Since most of the technology fields were new in Taiwan, Lin established collaborative programs globally, including in the U.S. (MIT, University of California, University of Washington), Japan (NIRIM, Hitachi, Toshiba) and Germany (IZFT). He was elected president of the Chinese Society of Materials Science (Taiwan). He led CSMS to participate in the Materials Research Society (International), where working relationships with counterparts from the Chinese Mainland were established.

1988–1994: leading ITRI

Lin was appointed executive director and president of ITRI in 1988, succeeding Morris Chang who took charge as CEO of the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (TSMC), the largest spin-off company of ITRI. Under Chang's stewardship, it was to become the world leader in microelectronics technology. ITRI has gradually become the leading technology institution in Taiwan dedicated to upgrading traditional industry and nurturing the high-tech industry. It nurtured streams of technology transfer for commercialization: laptop computers, electronic components, design and packaging of electronic modules, advanced IC testing, opto-electronic systems, engineering composites, industrial automation, specialty chemicals, energy conservations, pollution abatements, industrial safety, quality and standards. All the ITRI labs were led by expert professionals recruited worldwide. Lin considered the following as headquarters' responsibility: defining visions, setting objectives and strategy, strengthening infrastructure, providing resources and support, outlining performance standards and cultivating an institutional culture. All have contributed to transforming Taiwan into a knowledge-based economy in the 21st century.[3] [4]

Lin has guided ITRI into active participation in the global high-tech community. It has established alliances or collaborations with the Fraunhofer Gesselschaft (Germany), TNO (the Netherlands), SISIR (Singapore), CSIRO (Australia), AT&T Bell Labs (U.S.), and others. He also initiated scientific and technological exchanges between ITRI and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and institutions in the Chinese mainland, albeit in an uncertain political environment between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait. He was elected a foreign member to the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences (IVA),[5] member of the Hong Kong Academy of Engineering Sciences,[6] president of the Asia Pacific Confederation of Chemical Engineering (APCChE),[7] [8] and received the TWNSO Technology Award of the Third World Academy of Sciences, Drexel University Industrial Leadership Award, CIE-USA Award of Outstanding accomplishments, among other honors.

1995-2000: international engagements in innovation and entrepreneurship

Lin retired from ITRI in 1995 after serving two terms of his presidency. He rejoined Tsing-Hua University at Hsinchu as Professor of Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management and was soon offered the position of senior vice president and CTO of the Westlake Group of Companies in Houston, a petrochemical business. After a short stay, he accepted an appointment as a visiting professor at the National University of Singapore. He helped establish the cooperation in education and research between NUS and MIT which later became a collaboration between Singapore and MIT.

He participated actively in global innovation organizations. He was twice invited speaker at the Six Country Conference and repeatedly, the Salzburg Global Seminar[9] [10] in Austria and USA.

1997-2007: Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

In April 1997, Lin joined the new Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) as Vice President-Research and Development. At the juncture of Hong Kong returning to Chinese sovereignty, Lin, like many of his peers born in the time of the Sino-Japanese War, felt it a duty to contribute to this historic transition by working in Hong Kong. At the university, he placed a focus on establishing research infrastructure, research strategy and university-societal outreach.[11] He spearheaded the development of the Nansha IT Park, a partnership of HKUST, the Fok Ying-Tung Foundation, and Guangzhou city government, at a site near Humen where the historical Opium War was fought, with the hope to transform it to a center of innovation and entrepreneurship for the future Greater Hong Kong-Guangdong Bay Area. He took up the post of president/CEO of China Nansha Technology Enterprises, which provided the backbone support for the park. He retired in 2009 but remained affiliated as a faculty member in the departments of IEEM and CBME at HKUST. In a decade's span, HKUST grew rapidly and was assessed by Times Higher Education World University Rankings and Quacquarelli Symonds (QS World University Rankings) in the top 50 world-class universities. The university announced in spring 2021 the opening of a full-fledged campus in Nansha-Guangzhou, starting in the 2022 academic year.

An oral history conducted in 2007-2009 by the Bancroft Library, University of California-Berkeley, under a grant from the Kauffman Foundation, has documented Lin's work on promoting innovation and entrepreneurship, and his efforts on education.[12]

2009 onward: promoting innovation and traditional Chinese culture

Lin remained active in lecturing, writing, and consultancy. He held honorary/advisory professorships with many universities including Tsinghua University (Beijing), Beijing Institute of Technology, University of Science and Technology (Hefei), Shanghai Jiaotong University, Xian Jiaotong University and Southwest Jiaotong University (Chengdu) and Hong Kong Polytechnic University. He was repeatedly invited as lecturer at the national R&D Leadership Management Education (M.O.S.T.-China), International Technology Incubation (M.O.S.T-China) and the Pudong Executive Leadership Program (CCP-China). Besides promoting national innovation systems, he advocated the principles of Laozi as the source of innovation and Confucius on entrepreneurship management, by illustration of examples from modern innovations.

From 2009 to 2020, Lin helped connect the HKPolyU-developed fiber optics sensing system technology to the development of the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed rail line, to improve the health monitoring and safety management of major industrial infrastructures. In the spring of 2021, he was invited to join Hong Kong Baptist University as senior advisor to the president and vice-chancellor, and honorary professor of business. His focus was on advocating soft power leadership and innovations in a post-Covid pandemic society.

Extracurricular service in entrepreneurship

Over 30 years and at different periods, he participated in the management of public corporations and technology start-ups by serving as an advisor or member of a board of directors. These included Taiwan Power Corporation, Chinese Petroleum Corp., China Technical Consultant Services, Tsing-Tech Innovations, China Nansha Technology Enterprises, Evergreen Specialty Steels Ltd., SYNergy Science- Technology Corp, APT Photo-electronics Ltd., and others.

He has published over 100 technical papers and presentations, and 16 book chapters. After 2010, he has written five books on the management of technology, innovation, entrepreneurship, soft power, globalization, and national innovation systems:

  1. Has China Risen? Competition of Soft Power in the Globalization Era (Text in Chinese: 中華崛起未?全球化時代軟實⼒的競賽. 2010, ⾹港⼤學出版社) ISBN 978-988-8028-95- 5
  2. The Technology Innovation Quartet: Secrets of Successful Entrepreneurship (Text in Chinese: 科技創新四重奏-成功創業故事解密, 2013, 商訊⽂化出版社, 台北) ISBN 978- 986-5812-02-7
  3. The Innovation Quartet: From Lab to Market (Text in Chinese: 創新四重奏-從實驗室到市場, 2014. 上海交通⼤學出版社, 簡體中⽂版- based on 2 above with added materials) ISBN 978-7-313-11385-6
  4. Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Choice and Challenge (World Scientific Publishers, Singapore, 2018) ISBN 978-981-3146-60-0

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Harvard University Graduate School of Business- Executive Education: Advanced Management Program, AMP, Class 101, 1987.
  2. Web site: Industrial Technology Research Institute.
  3. Book: Behind East Asian Growth: The Political and Social Foundations of Prosperity . Otto C.C. Lin . Science and Technology Policy and its Influence on Economic Development in Taiwan. Rutledge. 1998. 0-415-16519-9. Rowen. Henry S.. London and New York.
  4. Book: Lin, Otto C.C.. 1994. Shih. C.T.. Yang. J.C.. Development and Transfer of Industrial Technology . Development and Transfer of Industrial Technology in Taiwan, R.O.C.. Elsevier. London and New York. 0-444-81686-0.
  5. Web site: Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences.
  6. Web site: The Hong Kong Academy of Engineering Sciences.
  7. Web site: The Asia-Pacific Confederation of Chemical Engineering.
  8. Book: Lin, Otto C.C.. 2003. in Darton. R.C.. Prince. R.G.H.. Wood. D.G.. Chemical Engineering: Vision of the World . Formulation of a Vision: Chemical Engineering in the 21st Century. Elsevier. 0-444-51309-4.
  9. https://www.salzburgglobal.org/ Salzburg Seminar Session 441, “From Lab to Market: Accelerating Innovation through University, Business and Government Partnership”, 2007.
  10. https://www.salzburgglobal.org/ Salzburg Seminar Session 451, “Innovation in Knowledge Based Economy: Accelerating the Benefits”, 2008
  11. Book: Conceicao. Pedro. "Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy: Opportunities and Challenges for the Knowledge Economy." Chapter 29 by Otto C.C. Lin, "The Role of Technology in Industrial and Economic Development in Hong Kong.". Gibson. David V.. Quorum Books. 2000. 1-56720-271-3. Heitor. Manuel V.. Shariq. Syed.
  12. Web site: Robin Li and Emily Hamilton, Oral History Interviewers, 2007-2009, "Otto Lin: Promoting Education, Innovation and Chinese Culture in the Era of Globalization", Vol 1. Oral History, Vol 2, Appendix. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California-Berkeley, 2010.