Difference between revisions of "Joe Decuir"

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Joe Decuir is an IEEE fellow engineer. He graduated from Berkeley in 1974, receiving a degree in electrical engineering and computer science.
 
Joe Decuir is an IEEE fellow engineer. He graduated from Berkeley in 1974, receiving a degree in electrical engineering and computer science.
  
In the Fall of '82 he was contacted by [[Jay Miner]] and became badge #3 at [[Amiga Corporation|Amiga]], then called Hi-Toro. He revisited the block diagram for a 16-bit "entertainment computer", drawn back when he worked at Atari. Joe was one of the architects of the whiteboard drawing of the Amiga Lorraine system hardware. He also drew up much of the early schematics for Agnus and timing diagrams.
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In the Fall of '82 he was contacted by [[Jay Miner]] and became badge #3 at [[Amiga Corporation|Amiga]], then called Hi-Toro. He revisited the block diagram for a 16-bit "entertainment computer", drawn back when he worked at [[Atari Incorporated|Atari]]. Joe was one of the architects of the whiteboard drawing of the Amiga [[Lorraine]] system hardware. He also drew up much of the early schematics for Agnus and timing diagrams.
  
 
However by the following year, it became expensive to keep him at Amiga. He was paid through April and eventually stopped showing up altogether.
 
However by the following year, it became expensive to keep him at Amiga. He was paid through April and eventually stopped showing up altogether.

Revision as of 20:26, 13 June 2023

Joe Decuir is an IEEE fellow engineer. He graduated from Berkeley in 1974, receiving a degree in electrical engineering and computer science.

In the Fall of '82 he was contacted by Jay Miner and became badge #3 at Amiga, then called Hi-Toro. He revisited the block diagram for a 16-bit "entertainment computer", drawn back when he worked at Atari. Joe was one of the architects of the whiteboard drawing of the Amiga Lorraine system hardware. He also drew up much of the early schematics for Agnus and timing diagrams.

However by the following year, it became expensive to keep him at Amiga. He was paid through April and eventually stopped showing up altogether. He then returned to Atari to do contracting work for their 1090 XL Expansion System.

In 1985, Joe and his consulting company Teledesign worked on the unreleased AnswerMate telephone answering device for the Amiga 1000.


References

  1. Joseph Decuir - IEEE Xplore
  2. Decuir, Joseph Three generations of animation machines - IEEE Potentials - Vol. 41 Issue 2 - 2022
  3. Decuir, Joseph Three generations of animation machines: Atari and Amiga Filmed at Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest - 3/23/2019