Glenn Hinton is an Intel Fellow, Digital Enterprise Group and Director of IA-32 Micro-architecture Development. He is responsible for the micro-architecture development of the next generation IA-32 design. He was appointed Intel Fellow in January 1999.
Hinton joined Intel as a new college graduate in 1983, after working for two summers as a co-op student starting as a design engineer. In 1986, Hinton was one of the two lead micro-architects of the i960� CA, which was the world's first super-scalar microprocessor. He was one of three senior architects in 1990 for the P6 processor design, which became the Intel� Pentium� Pro, Intel� Pentium� II, and Intel� Pentium� III processors. He led the micro-architecture development for the Intel� Pentium� 4 processor beginning in 1995. He holds more than 90 patents from 6 different CPU designs. He received the ACM Maurice Wilkes Award in 2002.
Hinton received bachelor's and master's degrees in Electrical Engineering from Brigham Young University in 1982 and 1983, respectively. He was born in Provo, Utah, in January 1957. |