Gadi Singer is vice president of the Mobility Group and general manager of Low Power Intel Architecture and Technologies Group for Intel Corporation.
Singer joined Intel in 1983. He held a variety of senior technical and management positions in Chip Design, Software Engineering and CAD Development including key compiler programs & advanced EDA technologies. From 1989 to 1993, he served in senior management positions on several processor design teams, including the original Intel� Pentium� processor.
From 1993 to 1998, Singer served as the general manager of the Microprocessor Products Group's Design Technology Division as well as the chairman of the world-wide EDA Industry Council. He became co-general manager of the IA-64 Processor Division in 1998 and General Manager of Enterprise Processors Division in 2000, where he directed the ramp of various enterprise processors, including the Intel� Itanium� and Intel� Xeon microprocessors. He was appointed vice president in January 1999. From 2002, Singer was the co-general manager of the PCA Components Group, and then the Cellular and Handheld Group (CHG). While in PCG, Singer oversaw the launch of Intel's first XScale-based processors for Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) and cell phone markets. He was appointed as the Chief Technology Officer of Intel Communications Group in August of 2004.
Singer is widely recognized for his technological contributions. Among other contributions, he was the inventor of the Schematics Formal Verification (SFV) method at Intel, establishing mathematical equivalence between design logic schematics to substantially reduce schematics functional bugs. Singer was also one of the inventors of Intel's Hardware Description Language (iHDL).
Prior to joining Intel, Singer was a software engineer at Elbit Electronics in Israel from 1981 to 1983. Singer received his bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering from Technion University, Israel, in 1983. He pursued graduate studies at Technion University from 1986 to 1988. |