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Henry Samueli: Champion of Digital Broadband


In 1991, only a few folks had Web entry. Those that did put up in on-line boards or electronic mail associates from house usually accessed the Web through phone line, their messages touring at a high velocity of 14.4 kilobits per second. In the meantime, cable TV was rocketing in recognition. By 1991, sixty % of U.S. households subscribed to a cable service; cable rollouts in the remainder of the world had been additionally choosing up velocity.

Hypothetically, utilizing that rising cable community as a substitute of cellphone strains for Web entry would dramatically increase the velocity of communications. And making cable TV itself digital as a substitute of analog would permit cable suppliers to hold many extra channels. The speculation of how to do this—utilizing analog-to-digital converters and digital sign processing to translate the analog waveforms that journey on coaxial cable into digital kind—was effectively established. However the cable modems required to implement such a digital broadband community weren’t on the mass market.

Enter Henry Samueli. In 1985, he had established a multidisciplinary analysis program on the College of California, Los Angeles, to develop chips for digital broadband. Over the following a number of years, he and his group created all kinds of proof-of-concept chips demonstrating the important thing constructing blocks of high-performance digital modems. And in 1991, Samueli, alongside together with his UCLA grad pupil Henry Nicholas, based Broadcom Corp. to commercialize the expertise.

At this time, the improvements in digital sign processing architectures pioneered at UCLA and Broadcom persist within the digital modems that allow each wired and wi-fi communications in our units. For these advances, together with contributions to increasing science, expertise, engineering, and math (STEM) schooling, Samueli is the recipient of
the 2025 IEEE Medal of Honor.

Henry Samueli

Present jobs

Philanthropist, Chairman of Broadcom Inc.

Date of beginning

20 September 1954

Birthplace

Buffalo, N.Y.

Household

Spouse, Susan; three kids; three grandchildren

Schooling

BSEE 1975, MSEE 1976, Ph.D. 1980, all in electrical engineering from the College of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

First job

Cashier and inventory boy in household’s liquor retailer

Largest shock in profession

The overwhelming success of Broadcom and the explosive development of the Web

Patents

75

Favourite type of music

Basic rock, together with Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, Metallica, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones

Most up-to-date TV sequence watched

“Lioness”

Favourite meals

Chocolate

Favourite film

The Godfather

Favourite nation

Italy, for the folks, the tradition, the meals, the surroundings

Favourite cities

Paris, London, New York, Tokyo

Leisure actions

E-biking, snowboarding, climbing, basketball

Pet peeves

Disorganization and messes

Key organizational memberships

IEEE, Marconi Society

Main awards

IEEE Medal of Honor: “For pioneering analysis and commercialization of broadband communication and networking applied sciences, and promotion of STEM schooling,” IEEE Fellow, Marconi Fellow, member of the Nationwide Academy of Engineering, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Ellis Island Medal of Honor, Broadcom’s 2024 Emmy for “Pioneering Applied sciences Enabling Excessive-Efficiency Communications over Cable TV Techniques”

Earlier than the Cable Modem—Approach Earlier than

Samueli began down the trail that may result in cable modems when he was in center college. However he wasn’t fascinated about a future profession when he enrolled in an electrical store class. It was simply that, he says, “electrical energy appeared type of mysterious, in contrast with steel or wooden.”

The trainer assigned a crystal radio challenge, he recollects, “however wrapping a wire round a tube from rest room paper and connecting the wire to a crystal wasn’t that thrilling to me.” So he thumbed by an electronics catalog in search of an alternate. A
Graymark five-tube radio caught his eye. It took some convincing earlier than the trainer agreed to let him sort out the challenge, which got here with difficult directions and concerned studying learn how to solder.

“I labored each night time,” Samueli says. “There have been a whole bunch of connections that I needed to solder up. It took a full semester to construct it, and, on the finish, I introduced it into class, plugged it in, and sound got here out of it. I used to be completely blown away. And I actually made it my mission in life to determine how radios work.”

Samueli’s trainer was blown away as effectively. And what he stated crystallized Samueli’s future. “He informed me, ‘Henry, actually, I by no means ever thought you possibly can do that. However clearly, you’ve obtained some particular items. I feel you must pursue electrical engineering as a profession. You’re going to do one thing large sometime.’ ”

UCLA Takes Maintain—and By no means Lets Go

Samueli finally utilized to UCLA—a college with a great electrical engineering program and inexpensive tuition that was near house. He went straight by to a Ph.D. however, he says, didn’t actually perceive how radios labored till just a few years past that.

After accumulating his Ph.D. in 1980, Samueli joined TRW to work on protection communications tasks. He says he beloved each minute. “It’s an amazing alternative to be taught since you’re coping with superhigh tech, the best expertise on the time. And with a giant funds, you may construct very subtle issues,” he says.

Samueli didn’t fully depart the world of upper schooling. In his spare time, he taught a circuit-design class at
California State College, Northridge, after which a number of circuits and sign processing courses at UCLA. In 1985, UCLA supplied him an assistant professorship, and he left TRW, taking coworker Henry Nicholas with him as his first Ph.D. pupil.

The 2 shaped the core of what would change into the multidisciplinary communications analysis program in UCLA’s Built-in Circuits and Techniques Laboratory. They collaborated with a number of college members within the electrical engineering and laptop science division to develop digital modem chips.

Photo of two men in dark suits standing in front of a tall modern office building. Broadcom cofounders Henry Samueli [left] and Henry Nicholas pose in entrance of the corporate’s headquarters in Irvine, Calif., in 1999. Ted Soqui/Corbis/Getty Photos

“Chip design is a really advanced and broad self-discipline,” Samueli factors out. “There are analog designs, digital designs, a number of methods, numerous architectures. Whereas such a multidisciplinary strategy is commonplace right now, it was pretty uncommon on the time.”

AT&T Bell Labs was main the world in digital-communications analysis, Samueli recollects, utilizing low-speed modems that communicated in the identical bandwidths because the human voice. The labs constructed these modems utilizing programmable digital sign processing chips from
Texas Devices and others.

“It was a software-driven strategy to constructing digital sign processing,” Samueli says. “And it solely ran at knowledge charges of tens of kilobits per second. Our problem was learn how to take these algorithms and make them run at tens of
megabits per second—one thousand occasions quicker.”

Samueli and his colleagues concluded {that a} programmable structure utilizing software program was simply too gradual. So that they started investigating parallel architectures that might implement subtle algorithms on a single chip with no software program, simply devoted {hardware}. “That was our innovation. Again then, it was very novel,” he notes. “At this time, it’s what makes AI processors work.”

UCLA researchers who specialised in analog sign processing collaborated with the group to combine high-speed analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters into the core features of the chip—“actually breakthrough work,” Samueli says.

I used to be completely blown away. And I actually made it my mission in life to determine how radios work.—Henry Samueli

Samueli and his group weren’t considering patents whereas they had been doing this analysis. As teachers, their focus was on publishing their outcomes—some 100-plus papers over 10 years. However many others noticed business potential of their work.

“After we’d publish a paper, we’d go to a convention and make a presentation,” Samueli says. “Folks would come as much as us after the discuss and say, ‘That is actually neat stuff. Have you ever ever considered commercializing it and beginning an organization?’”

Samueli and Nicholas took the leap in August of 1991, incorporating Broadcom Corp. and chipping in US $5,000 every to hire an workplace and purchase computer systems and workplace provides.

Samueli saved working full-time at UCLA whereas Broadcom started bringing in small protection contracts: creating a digital frequency synthesizer for TRW, a digital filter for a Rockwell microwave radio, and, for the U.S. Air Drive, a digital filter to guard GPS indicators from jamming.

“These tasks funded our R&D, and we gained increasingly data,” says Samueli. [For more on Samueli’s early career, see
this 1999 profile.]

Scientific Atlanta Connects with Broadcom

In December 1992, a pupil of Samueli’s
gave a presentation at Globecom (the IEEE World Telecommunications Convention, that’s) a few prototype 10-plus megabit-per-second digital modem chip the group had developed.

“What was totally different of their chip is that it built-in digital and analog,” recollects Leo Montreuil, then an engineer at
Scientific Atlanta and now an IC design engineer at Broadcom. On the time, Scientific Atlanta shared the U.S. cable TV set-top field market with just one competitor, Basic Instrument. “We had many firms making chips for Scientific Atlanta, however not that type of chip.”

After the presentation, Montreuil approached the coed, who referred him to Samueli. Montreuil met with Samueli and Nicholas three months later.

Photo of a man in a suit perched on a fancy wooden bookcase Henry Samueli is that this 12 months’s recipient of the IEEE Medal of Honor for his contributions to digital broadband expertise and his help of STEM schooling.Peter Adams

Scientific Atlanta wasn’t simply casually curious in regards to the work. The corporate had signed a serious contract with Time Warner to construct 4,000 set-top packing containers for the world’s first digital cable system, known as the
Full Service Community. It wanted a digital modem for that field, however the obligatory chips weren’t commercially accessible.

“What they had been attempting to do in a single chip appeared so a lot better than multichip methods being developed by others,” says Montreuil. “If you go from analog to a digital implementation, you must fear about drift, temperature sensitivity, and different points. The extra you may implement within the digital area, the extra predictable is the system.”

Scientific Atlanta awarded a $1 million improvement contract to Broadcom in June of 1993. Though Broadcom’s design ended up utilizing three chips, the corporate did mix analog and digital circuitry on the identical silicon.

“The challenge was easy,” Samueli says, “as a result of it was primarily based on the prototype designs we had already completed. And it labored the primary time, flawlessly.”

Time Warner’s digital cable community—activated in Orlando, Fla., in early 1995—was a technical success, however Time Warner didn’t take it any additional. The community wasn’t supposed to be financially viable, Montreuil says, declaring that the core of every house system was a prohibitively costly Solar SPARC workstation. “The purpose was to amass data and to get our foot within the door for the following era.”

Broadcom’s modem design impressed each Scientific Atlanta and Basic Instrument. The 2 opponents invested $1 million every, for a ten % whole stake within the startup. That funding allowed Broadcom to maintain engaged on digital modems, to scale back the price by placing all of the features on a single chip.

Sherman Chen was a senior engineer at Basic Instrument on the time. “We knew then that the Broadcom gadget would dramatically prolong the boundaries of communications,” recollects Chen, who’s now vp of engineering in Broadcom’s broadband video group. “Concepts like superior error correction and digital compression had been round, however they had been all simply elegant theories till Broadcom constructed the primary mixed-signal silicon for broadband communications. Broadcom created an trade.”

Broadcom wasn’t the one firm chasing the low-cost digital modem grail. One key competitor was LANcity, which had a $500 digital modem. The market was evolving shortly, and it was turning into clear to cable operators that this new expertise would require standardization. Broadcom, CableLabs, Basic Instrument, LANcity, 3Com, and others
started collaborating in 1995 to create a world commonplace known as the Knowledge-Over-Cable Service Interface Specification (DOCSIS).

Folks would come as much as us after the discuss and say, ‘That is actually neat stuff. Have you ever ever considered commercializing it and beginning an organization?’ ”—Henry Samueli 

Round that point, Samueli left UCLA to concentrate on Broadcom, which had lately moved from Los Angeles to Irvine, in Orange County. Reluctant to chop his educational ties, he requested that his departure be thought-about a brief depart of absence. He formally stays on depart from UCLA even now.

In 1995, Broadcom launched its first mainstream business product—that’s, a tool constructed to promote on the open market, not developed below contract. The BCM3100 was an under-$20, single-chip, DOCSIS-compatible digital modem. In 1996, Broadcom added one other kind of product: digital Ethernet chips, what Samueli says was the world’s first all-digital implementation of Ethernet expertise. With these two profitable product strains, Broadcom went public in 1998 at a valuation of $1 billion, making Samueli, Nicholas, and lots of of Broadcom’s 320 or so staff rich. By mid-2000, that valuation had jumped to greater than $60 billion, with Samueli’s stake price about $10 billion, and, in accordance with the
Orange County Register, the typical worker price almost $6 million.

“We had been a really beneficiant firm to our staff,” Samueli says. “We gave inventory to just about everyone within the firm. We had it to offer as a result of we didn’t dilute our shares by taking over enterprise capital buyers.”

The SEC Goes After Broadcom’s Inventory Choice Grants

This sharing of the wealth, paradoxically, led to one of many darkest chapters in Samueli’s story. Within the mid-2000s, the U.S. Securities and Change Fee started investigating using inventory choices at quite a lot of tech firms, together with Broadcom. The SEC opened a proper inquiry into Broadcom’s practices in late 2006 and in 2008 charged a number of Broadcom executives, together with Samueli and Nicholas, of backdating inventory choices.

“It was a nightmare,” Samueli says. “We went by 5 years of hell. It’s scary. They threaten you. They are saying, ‘We’re going to place you in jail for 300 years.’ ”

In late 2009, the case got here earlier than U.S. District Court docket Decide
Cormac Carney. After listening to a few of the proof, together with testimony from Samueli and others, the choose “threw every thing out,” Samueli says.

Carney appeared significantly outraged by the prosecution’s therapy of Samueli.
His ruling acknowledged: “The uncontroverted proof at trial established that Dr. Samueli was an excellent engineer and a person of unbelievable integrity. There was no proof at trial to counsel that Dr. Samueli did something incorrect, not to mention felony. But, the federal government launched into a marketing campaign of intimidation and different misconduct to embarrass him and produce him down.”

Says Samueli: “This complete choices backdating scandal was distress, however I wouldn’t change what we did. I feel being overly beneficiant to staff is an efficient factor.”

In the meantime, Broadcom cofounder Nicholas was struggling. He had resigned from the corporate in 2003, and across the identical time because the inventory choices investigation, he was indicted for distribution of unlawful medication. Nicholas entered rehab in 2008, and
the costs had been finally dropped. A decade later, although, Nicholas was arrested in Las Vegas for drug trafficking and took a plea deal with out admitting guilt.

“I haven’t spoken to him in a few years,” says Samueli. “It’s actually unhappy. However what he did for the corporate can’t be underestimated. I want him all the perfect.”

Samueli’s Philanthropy and the Giving Pledge

Samueli remained a gradual presence as Broadcom’s chief expertise officer till 2018, persevering with by its acquisition by Avago in 2016. (The ensuing entity is now known as
Broadcom Inc.) Since 2018, he’s served as chairman. He nonetheless has a giant affect on the corporate’s engineers. Charlie Kawwas, president of Broadcom’s semiconductor options group, says that Samueli continues to attend all the division’s technical critiques—about 72 a 12 months, every lasting 2 to three hours.

“He engages with the engineers, asking questions and giving suggestions, they usually love that,” Kawwas says.

Photo of a smiling man in cold weather gear standing with his arms lifted on a snowy rock against snow-covered mountains and water. On a cruise to Antarctica in 2023, Henry Samueli “went to each lecture…he went on each tour,” a colleague recollects. Lindsey Spindle

Together with his present private wealth
estimated by Forbes at about $20 billion, Samueli spends a lot of his time giving cash away by the Samueli Basis. He additionally chairs the board of the Broadcom Basis. He and his spouse, Susan, have dedicated to the Giving Pledge, promising to offer away most of their wealth both throughout their lifetimes or of their wills.

“After Broadcom went public, and the inventory was flying, Susan and I made a decision we would have liked to begin giving this away. It was simple to think about what I wished to offer again to. What created this wealth? My engineering schooling. And UCLA was that whole schooling—my bachelor’s, grasp’s, Ph.D., college member. So there was no query in my thoughts that the primary main reward could be to
UCLA and the engineering college, and that was $30 million in 1999.” [See “Henry Samueli’s Career Advice for Aspiring Engineers.”]

Since then, the Samueli Basis has supported engineering and integrative well being packages at UCLA and the College of California, Irvine, for a complete, Samueli estimates, of greater than $500 million. (Integrative well being is well being care that embraces various therapies together with standard medication and is a ardour of Samueli’s spouse.) The inspiration additionally targets tasks geared toward bringing college students into the STEM pipeline, together with making a constitution center and highschool—
the Samueli Academy—centered on hands-on studying in engineering and design arts. It’s working with neighborhood faculties to broaden coaching for nursing, development, maritime, and STEM careers. And the muse funds initiatives to fight antisemitism and to advertise collaborations with Israel and tasks inside Israel, a rising focus in response to current occasions.

“He engages with the engineers, asking questions and giving suggestions, they usually love that.”—Charlie Kawwas, Broadcom

Altogether the muse has distributed greater than $1 billion so far, and it’s on observe to offer away a few billion extra on this decade, stories
Lindsey Spindle, president of the Samueli Household Philanthropies, which oversees the muse and the household’s different, smaller philanthropic efforts.

“Henry’s engineering background provides him the appropriate structure for philanthropy,” Spindle says. “He is aware of about methods constructing. He appreciates interconnectivity. If you find yourself constructing {hardware}, you must take into consideration the bigger system during which it can perform, be affected person, and be prepared to iterate. If you care about combating antisemitism, ending homelessness, and reorienting medication in direction of well-being, you additionally need to have a methods orientation and be prepared to iterate.”

Photo of a cheering man and woman wearing Anaheim Ducks jerseys holding aloft a large silver trophy shaped like a goblet. Henry Samueli and his spouse, Susan, have fun the Stanley Cup victory for the Anaheim Geese hockey group, which Samueli purchased in 2005. Harry How/Getty Photos

Samueli can be the proprietor of the Nationwide Hockey League franchise the
Anaheim Geese. At a look, this would possibly appear to be a typical wealthy man’s plaything—and there’s no doubt that he enjoys his involvement with the group. However the acquisition got here from an impulse to do good. In 2003, the corporate managing the Geese’ house, the Anaheim Enviornment, went bankrupt. Anaheim officers knew Samueli was an lively businessman within the Ocean County neighborhood, they usually requested him to take over administration of the sector (now known as the Honda Middle). In the meantime, Geese proprietor Disney was desperate to promote the group.

Says Samueli: “In concern of an outsider coming in and shifting the group out of city, we determined that, for the neighborhood’s sake, we might make certain they keep right here—and discover ways to run a sports activities group.”

“It was a giant studying curve,” he says. “However in any enterprise, it’s actually in regards to the administration. We put in a great administration group—and gained the Stanley Cup in our second 12 months of possession.”

His dive into studying about hockey is attribute of Samueli’s strategy to only about every thing, individuals who’ve labored with him report.

“Henry has a seemingly limitless capability to entertain new concepts,” Spindle says. She described a visit to Antarctica, for which her household joined a few of the Samuelis. “Henry went to each lecture supplied on the ship. He went on each tour,” she says. In his work with the muse, she continued, he’s equally curious and engaged. “He reveals up at each assembly,” she says. “You’ll be able to ship him a 120-page doc, and he’ll learn each phrase and are available ready to ask questions.”

The hockey group is a part of Samueli’s funding in, and delight of, the Orange County neighborhood. Subsequent up is creating a real downtown Anaheim, within the type of an arts and leisure district tagged
OCVIBE. And in his free time, he takes lengthy e-bike rides simply to benefit from the neighborhoods.

“OCVIBE and the Geese are an necessary a part of our lives,” Samueli says. “And as Broadcom inventory grows, we simply maintain placing increasingly cash into the muse. That’s not going to cease. Then, after all, there’s being on the Broadcom board and deeply concerned with Broadcom—I can see that persevering with for a few years. Theoretically, I’m retired, however I’m as busy as ever.”

This text was up to date on 21 April 2025.

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