- Steve Furber
Professor Stephen Byram Furber
CBE , FRS,FREng (born 1953 inManchester , England) is the ICL Professor of Computer Engineering at the School of Computer Science at theUniversity of Manchester but is probably best known for his work at Acorn where he was one of the designers of theBBC Micro and the ARM 32-bit RISCmicroprocessor .Furber was educated at
Manchester Grammar School and represented the UK in theInternational Mathematical Olympiad inHungary in 1970. He went up to Cambridge and received a BA inmathematics in 1974. In 1978, he was appointed the Rolls-Royce Research Fellow inAerodynamics atEmmanuel College, Cambridge and was awarded aPhD in 1980.From 1980 to 1990, Furber worked at
Acorn Computers Ltd where he was a Hardware Designer and then Design Manager. He was a principal designer of theBBC Micro and the ARM microprocessor. In August 1990 he moved to theVictoria University of Manchester to become the ICL Professor of Computer Engineering and established the Amulet research group.In February 1997, Furber was elected a Fellow of the
British Computer Society . In 1998, he became a member of the European Working Group on Asynchronous Circuit Design (ACiD-WG). In 2002, he was elected a Fellow of theRoyal Society and was Specialist Adviser to the House of Lords Science and Technology Select Committee inquiry into microprocessor technology. In 2003, he was a member of theEPSRC research cluster in biologically-inspired novel computation. On16 September 2004 , he gave a speech on "Hardware Implementations of Large-scale Neural Networks" as part of the initiation activities of theAlan Turing Institute . He was elected a Fellow of theIEEE in 2005. In September 2007 he was awarded the prestigiousIET Faraday Medal.Professor Furber's latest project is known as Spinnaker, also nicknamed the 'brain box', to be constructed at the University of Manchester. This is an attempt to build a new kind of computer that directly mimics the workings of the human brain. Spinnaker is essentially an
artificial neural network realised in hardware, a massively parallel processing system eventually designed to incorporate a million ARM processors. The finished Spinnaker will model 1% of the human brain's capability, or around 1 billion neurons.Furber is a Fellow of the
Royal Academy of Engineering , of the Royal Society, theIEEE and theInstitution of Engineering and Technology , and is aChartered Engineer . He is on the Advisory Board ofTheseus Logic, Inc. Furber's research interests include
asynchronous systems , ultra-low-power processors forsensor networks , on-chip interconnect and GALS (Globally Asynchronous Locally Synchronous ), andneural systems engineering .He was appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2008 New Year Honours. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7162935.stm]External links
* [http://www.cs.manchester.ac.uk/apt/people/sfurber/ Home page]
* [http://www.cary.demon.co.uk/acorn/acornFurber.html Acorn recollections]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7162935.stm BBC News Technology - Home computing pioneer honoured] 29/12/07
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/5187596.stm BBC News - Scientists to build 'brain box'] 17/07/06
* [http://intranet.cs.man.ac.uk/apt/projects/SpiNNaker/ The University of Manchester - The Spinnaker Project]
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