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Hermann Hauser

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Nationality
  
Austrian

Awards
  
Mountbatten Medal

Influenced
  
Role
  
Entrepreneur

Name
  
Hermann Hauser


Hermann Hauser Hermann Hauser awarded top Silicon Valley honour Real


Born
  
Hermann Maria Hauser 23 October 1948 (age 76) Vienna (
1948-10-23
)

Institutions
  
Amadeus Capital Partners LtdPlastic LogicCavendish LaboratoryARM LtdCambridge NetworkOlivetti Research LaboratoryGlobespan-Virata Inc.Acorn ComputersAdvanced Telecommunication Modules Ltd

Alma mater
  
Vienna University (MA)University of Cambridge (PhD)

Thesis
  
Mechanically Activated Chemical Reactions (1977)

Known for
  
InventionsEntrepreneurshipVenture capitalist

Notable awards
  
KBE (2015) FRS (2012)Lovelace Medal (2011)FREng (2002)CBE (2002)

Education
  
King's College, Cambridge, University of Cambridge, University of Vienna

Organizations founded
  
Acorn Computers, Acorn Computer Group

Oral history of hermann hauser


Hermann Maria Hauser, KBE, FRS, FREng, FInstP, CPhys (born 1948) is an Austrian-born entrepreneur who is primarily associated with Silicon Fen in England.

Contents

Hermann Hauser imageshuffingtonpostcom20120516DrHermannHaus

Interview of hermann hauser part two


Education and early life

Hermann Hauser Intune Networks Hermann Hauser image 2 1232012jpg

When he was 16 he came to the United Kingdom to learn English at a language school in Cambridge. After a master's degree in Physics from Vienna University, he returned to the University of Cambridge to do a PhD in Physics at the Cavendish Laboratory.

Career

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Hauser is probably best known for his part in setting up Acorn Computers with Chris Curry in 1978. When Olivetti took control of Acorn in 1985 he became vice-president for research at Olivetti, in charge of laboratories in the US and Europe. In 1986, Hauser co-founded the Olivetti Research Laboratory (ORL) in Cambridge with Andy Hopper, who became the laboratory's director. Hauser's role in Acorn was portrayed by Edward Baker-Duly in the BBC drama Micro Men.

Hermann Hauser Technology entrepreneur and venture capitalist Hermann Hauser The

In 1988, Hauser left Olivetti to start the Active Book Company, investing £1 million of his own money. Not wanting to repeat the mistakes made by Acorn, which had kept its technology to itself, he demonstrated the Active Book to as many large companies as he could. AT&T Corporation acquired Active Book and incorporated it into EO Personal Communicator in July 1991. Hauser became chief technical officer and chairman of EO Europe. EO folded on 29 July 1994.

Hermann Hauser ARM and the Man Hausers Alist legacy stands test of time

In 1990, Hauser was involved in spinning out Advanced RISC Machines (ARM) from Acorn.

Hermann Hauser More than half of jobs at risk from machine learning says Hermann

In 1993, Hauser set up Advanced Telecommunication Modules Ltd with Andy Hopper. The company was acquired by Conexant Systems on 1 March 2004. He founded NetChannel Ltd in June 1996 as a holding company to begin work on marketing the NetStation. NetChannel was sold to AOL in 1996. He claimed in the 1990s that the networking technology used for AppleTalk was based on the (unpatented) Cambridge Ring.

Hermann Hauser Hermann Hauser hermannhauser Twitter

In 1997 he co-founded Amadeus Capital Partners Ltd, a venture capital company, and in 1998 he co-founded Cambridge Network with David Cleevely and Alec Broers.

In 2000, Plastic Logic was founded, with Hauser as chairman.

On 14 June 2001, the Hauser-Raspe Foundation was registered as a charity by Hauser and Pamela Raspe to advance education.

In August 2004, Amadeus Capital Partners led the Series B venture capital financing of Solexa and Hauser joined its board of directors. Solexa developed a next-generation DNA sequencing technology which became the market leader. Solexa was sold to Illumina, Inc (ILMN) of San Diego in January 2007 for over $600M. In 2009, Dr. Hauser was announced as the first customer of the Illumina Personal Genome Sequencing service.

As of 2009, Hauser is the head of the East Anglia Stem Cell research network.

Hauser is a non-executive director of Cambridge Display Technology, a non-executive director of XMOS Ltd and a member of the board of Red-M (Communications) Ltd. He holds honorary doctorates from the Universities of Bath and Loughborough and from Anglia Ruskin University. He is a member of the advisory board on the Higher Education Innovation Fund, and of the UK's Council for Science and Technology. Hauser was commissioned by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to write a report on technology and innovation in the UK, which contributed to the government's fund for Technology and Innovation Centres.

Since 2015, he is actively supporting Austrian start-ups and technology companies. In particular, he has invested in 2017 in the MEMS-speaker start-up USound and in eyeson a cloud based Unified Communications solution nomiated from Gartner Inc. as Cool Vendor in Unified Communications, 2017.

Awards and honours

Hauser was voted the UK's 'Computer Personality of the Year' of 1984. In 2010, Eureka, in its "100 most important scientists", placed Hauser at 51. He became patron of The Centre for Computing History in December 2011, 30 years after the launch of the BBC Micro.

On 8 July 2002, Hauser was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (FInstP) and an International Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng). In May 2004 he presented the prestigious IEE Pinkerton Lecture. In 2005, Hauser received a Lifetime Achievement Award for his work as a venture capitalist and entrepreneur. The award was presented at the annual European Electronics Industry Awards in London. Hauser was awarded an Honorary CBE for "innovative service to the UK enterprise sector" in 2001. In 1998, Hauser was elected into an honorary fellowship of Hughes Hall, Cambridge, and he was also elected into an honorary fellowship of King's College, Cambridge with effect from 1 January 2000. In the same year he was awarded the Mountbatten Medal.

Hauser was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2012. His nomination reads:

References

Hermann Hauser Wikipedia


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