-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueSpotlight on India
We invite you on a virtual tour of India’s thriving ecosystem, guided by the Global Electronics Association’s India office staff, who share their insights into the region’s growth and opportunities.
Supply Chain Strategies
A successful brand is built on strong customer relationships—anchored by a well-orchestrated supply chain at its core. This month, we look at how managing your supply chain directly influences customer perception.
What's Your Sweet Spot?
Are you in a niche that’s growing or shrinking? Is it time to reassess and refocus? We spotlight companies thriving by redefining or reinforcing their niche. What are their insights?
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
Joe Fjelstad's Book Review: The Innovators
February 8, 2021 | Joe Fjelstad, Verdant ElectronicsEstimated reading time: 4 minutes

I have been involved in the electronics interconnection industry in one way or another since mid 1971. Next year will mark a half century and that fact both shocks and amazes me. The time has passed quickly largely because It has been such a great experience. Over the course of those nearly 50 years, I have met and been able to call friend some of premier contributors to the electronics interconnection industry, many of whom in turn have directly interacted with some of the top tier technological icons of the electronics universe.
It was arguably because most of my experience in electronics was captured in Silicon Valley which has for somewhere around seven decades has been one of the key hubs of electronic innovation, especially semiconductor technology in the world. I had the good fortune to work and grow in the middle of a technical hurricane with advances in electronics (and other) technology happening at a prodigious/mind-numbing pace. At the time, it was nigh onto impossible to fully appreciate, let alone truly comprehend, the rate of change as it happened. Still, through technical journals and local newspapers it was possible to register some of the big changes as major players announced latest development and start-ups formed to try and create the next great thing but keeping it all within the perspective of history was not easy.
That brings me to the real purpose of this commentary and that is a brief review of The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution by Walter Isaacson. It is for me the best technology history book I have ever read and at the same time one of the most engaging and entertaining. It is a forte of Isaacson to write biographies of great people. I have read his other books on DaVinci, Steve Jobs, Ben Franklin and Albert Einstein and found them equally brilliant. Isaacson has a number of other titles I have yet to get to in the future. He is a singularly great storyteller.
While most of his previous books traced the lives (or partial lives) of more than five dozen amazingly creative individuals, The Innovators instead traces the life an industry, waltzing through time and space from the 19th century to the present day through the lives and disparate contributions of a cast of creative geniuses. Isaacson has woven together a beautifully crafted tale of computer technology from creative mechanical genius Charles Babbage and is brilliant colleague and arguably first programmer in history, Ada Lovelace (interestingly the daughter of poet Lord Byron) to the modern day icons Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Tim Berners-Lee . In the process Isaacson introduces the reader to many of the unsung heroes and heroines whose efforts over time made possible the world of electronics and instant global communication we enjoy today and secured them a place in the pantheon of the computer and electronics industry’s most creative geniuses
What I particularly enjoyed was the way Isaacson tied together the innovators and their contributions with their personal lives. They were all human but also driven by dreams and vision. They saw not what wasn’t there but what wasn’t there yet. They were both individuals and teams who built upon the foundations others left for them and they advanced the cause. I also much enjoyed the way Isaacson explained the technologies that sequentially made possible the advances, from Babbage’s mechanically switched analytical engine to the vacuum tube, to the transistor to the integrated circuit. Being more of a hardware guy than software aficionado I was most entertained by the progression. Steeped in printed circuit technology, I could clearly sense how Jack Kilby might make the leap from discrete transistor to an integrated circuit. Before he went to Texas Instruments had been working for Centralab In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which made printed circuits. My guess is that his exposure to printed circuits (which were printed inks at the time—and which, interestingly, are making a comeback with today’s additive manufacturing tools—informed his invention. Bob Noyce came up with the same idea independently and the planar process looked even more like a PCB. The refinement of that process has been going on ever since, just as is the case with PCB technology. Part of what inspired them was the so called “tyranny of numbers” which was predicated on the fact that up to that point, discrete interconnections were made by point-to-point wires. It needed to be changed.
The story line continues in the book to the invention and evolution of the computer, mainframe to personal, and programming and ultimately to the invention of the internet (which was in part to assure communications could survive a nuclear with multiple interconnected nodes) and finally to the world wide web which today allows anyone anywhere to access virtually all the knowledge of mankind’s collective history.
This brief review of The Innovators by Walter Isaacson cannot do justice to the value I personally have placed on the book. It is a must read for any technologist who wishes to know and better understand the history and the technologies that made their job possible and perhaps inspire them to build on the foundation the giants who preceded them have left.
Testimonial
"Advertising in PCB007 Magazine has been a great way to showcase our bare board testers to the right audience. The I-Connect007 team makes the process smooth and professional. We’re proud to be featured in such a trusted publication."
Klaus Koziol - atgSuggested Items
Smartphone Production Rises 4% QoQ in 2Q25 as Inventory Adjustment Ends
09/12/2025 | TrendForceTrendForce’s latest investigations reveal that global smartphone production reached 300 million units in 2Q25, up 4% QoQ and 4.8% YoY, driven by seasonal demand and the recovery of brands such as Oppo and Transsion following inventory adjustments.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
09/12/2025 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007We may be post-Labor Day, but it is still hot-hot-hot here in the great state of Arizona—much like our news cycles, which have continued to snap, crackle, and pop with eye-raising headlines over this past week. In broader global tech news this week, AI and tariff-type restrictions continues to dominate with NVIDIA raising its voice against U.S. lawmakers pushing chip restrictions, ASML investing in a Dutch AI start-up company to the tune of $1.5 billion, and the UAE joining the ranks of the U.S. and China in embracing “open source” with their technology in hopes of accelerating their AI position.
Delta Electronics Posts 26.7% Growth in Sales Revenues for August
09/12/2025 | Delta ElectronicsDelta Electronics, Inc. announced its consolidated sales revenues for August 2025 totaled NT$47,860 million, a 26.7 percent increase as compared to NT$37,770 million for August 2024 and a 5.4 percent increase as compared to NT$45,397 million for July 2025.
Flex Named to TIME's World's Best Companies List for Third Consecutive Year
09/12/2025 | FlexFlex announced its inclusion on the TIME World's Best Companies 2025 list. This marks the third consecutive year the company was included in this prestigious ranking, which recognizes top-performing companies across the globe.
Direct Imaging System Market Size to Hit $4.30B by 2032, Driven by Increasing Demand for High-Precision PCB Manufacturing
09/11/2025 | Globe NewswireAccording to the SNS Insider, “The Direct Imaging System Market size was valued at $2.21 Billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $4.30 Billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 8.68% during 2025-2032.”