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Macquarie University

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About Neil

Neil H. E. Weste is an Australian engineer and inventor specializing in integrated circuit design. He earned a BSc in Physics in 1974, a BE in Electrical Engineering in 1976, and a PhD in 1978, all from the University of Adelaide, and later received a Doctor of Engineering (honoris causa) from the same institution in 2014. Weste held positions at Bell Labs, where he developed the MULGA IC design suite and contributed to graphics and speech recognition chips, and at Symbolics, where he led the design of the first fully integrated LISP microprocessor. During a sabbatical at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he developed a CMOS design course that formed the basis of his influential textbook.

In 1995, Weste returned to Australia as Professor of Microelectronic Systems at Macquarie University, where he focused on wireless IC design for the IEEE 802.11a standard. In 1997, he co-founded Radiata Communications with David Skellern, developing one of the first fully integrated CMOS chipsets for high-speed wireless LAN, which was acquired by Cisco Systems in 2001. He continued as an adjunct professor at Macquarie, supervising PhD students and supporting research in silicon germanium mm-wave IC design. Weste is the co-author of the widely used textbook Principles of CMOS VLSI Design, now in its fourth edition with David Harris, which has been adopted by hundreds of institutions worldwide and translated into multiple languages. He holds 14 U.S. patents related to wireless communication in CMOS circuits. Weste is a Fellow of the IEEE and the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering. He was an initial inductee into the Macquarie University Innovation Hall of Fame and an inductee into the Pearcey Foundation Hall of Fame. He later founded NHEW R&D and joined Morse Micro as VP of Engineering.

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