Art Inspired by Science and Mathematics - Prof. Carlo H. Séquin

3D artwork designed by Prof. Carlo H. Séquin is on display at Cal and many other universities across the nation. Prof. Carlo H. Séquin has had a love for geometry since high school. During the last 40 years of his professional career he has been involved in many design tasks that allowed him to employ and further develop his geometrical skills. From 1970 till 1976 he worked at Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, in the group that created the first solid-state image sensor compatible with American Broadcast TV. In 1977 he joined the faculty in the EECS Department at Berkeley. He started out by teaching courses on the subject of very large-scale integrated (VLSI) circuits, and jointly with Dave Patterson and their graduate students they constructed the first Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) on a chip. He then focused on the development of computer aided design (CAD) tools for circuit designers, architects, and for mechanical engineers. With the design and construction of
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