Lisa Su Age, Husband, Net Worth, Micro Devices, Age, Sued

Lisa Su
Lisa Su

 Lisa Su Biography

Lisa Su is of Taiwanese and American descent. She serves as AMD’s chair, CEO, and president. At Texas Instruments, IBM, and Freescale Semiconductor, Lisa Su started her career in a variety of engineering and management roles. During her tenure as vice president of IBM’s Semiconductor Research and Development Center, she is renowned for creating production processes for silicon-on-insulator semiconductors and more effective semiconductor chips.

Lisa Su CEO of AMD

After joining the company in 2012 and serving in several prestigious positions, including senior vice president of AMD’s worldwide business units and chief operational officer, Su was named president and CEO of AMD in October 2014.

She has since held board positions with Cisco Systems, the Global Semiconductor Alliance, and the U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association. In addition to these major accomplishments, she is also a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

She has received numerous recognitions, including the Executive of the Year award from EE Times in 2014 and the World’s Greatest Leaders title from Fortune in 2017. In 2021, she received the IEEE Robert Noyce Medal for the first time as a woman.

Lisa Su Age

Lisa Tzwu-Fang Su was born on November 11, 1969, in Tainan, Taiwan, to Taiwanese Hokkien-speaking parents. Su is currently 53 years as of 2023.

Lisa Su Parents

Su Chun and Sandy Lo are the names of her parents. At the age of three, Lisa and her family immigrated to the United States.

Lisa Su Education

When she was 10 years old, she took her brother’s remote control cars apart and fixed them. In junior high school, she bought her first computer, an Apple II. In 1986, she graduated from the Bronx High School of Science in New York City.

Su enrolled at MIT in the fall of 1986 with the intention of majoring in either electrical engineering or computer science. She decided on electrical engineering since, in her memory, it looked to be the most challenging. She participated in the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program as an undergraduate research assistant during her first year, “manufacturing test silicon wafers for graduate students.”

Her interest in semiconductors was sparked by the project and her summer internships at Analog Devices. She remained focused on the topic for the remainder of her education, spending much of her time in labs designing and adjusting products. After earning her bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, she obtained her master’s degree from MIT in 1991. 1990 to 1994 she spent studying.

Her Ph.D. thesis was titled Extreme-submicrometer silicon-on-insulator (SOI) MOSFETs. She graduated with her Ph.D. in electrical engineering from MIT in 1994. Her Ph.D. thesis was titled Extreme-submicrometer silicon-on-insulator (SOI) MOSFETs.

Achievements

After college, she worked at a lot of big companies. She worked at IBM and then at a company called Cisco Systems. Lisa also worked at another company called Analog Devices. In addition, she worked at all these companies, and then she started working at a company called the Global Semiconductor Alliance. She also started working at a company called the U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association.

Career

Texas Instruments and IBM R&D from 1994 to 1999

Su joined Texas Instruments’ technical staff in June 1994 and worked there until February 1995 in the Semiconductor Process and Device Center (SPDC). Su was made vice president of IBM’s semiconductor research and development center in the same month she was hired by the company as a research staff member with a focus on device physics.

When it came to creating the “recipe” to use copper connections with semiconductor chips rather than aluminum, Su played a “vital role” while working at IBM. This “solved the difficulty of keeping copper impurities from contaminating the devices throughout production.” Su said that when collaborating with several IBM design teams on the device’s specifics, “my specialty was not in copper, but I relocated to where the difficulties were.”

2000–2007: IBM Emerging Products division

Su was hired in 2000 to work as Lou Gerstner’s technical assistant for a full year. She then assumed the position of director for new initiatives, explaining that “I was effectively in charge of myself because there wasn’t anyone else in the organization.”  She established the IBM Emerging Products division, led it as head, and quickly hired 10 staff members to concentrate on biochips and “low-power and broadband semiconductors.” Their initial creation was a microprocessor that extended the life of batteries in mobile phones and other portable gadgets.

Su joined Freescale Semiconductor in 2007 and served as the company’s chief technology officer until 2009. During her time as CTO, she oversaw research and development. From 2008 to 2011, she held the positions of senior vice president and general manager of Freescale’s networking and multimedia group. In this role, she was responsible for the company’s global strategy, marketing, and engineering for its embedded communications and applications processor business.

Lisa Su Husband

Su and her husband Dan reside in Austin, Texas – the same place where Su and Nvidia co-founder and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang have been described as cousins or niece and uncle. She is renowned for her work creating manufacturing processes for silicon-on-insulator semiconductors and more effective semiconductor chips.

Lisa Su Net Worth

According to Forbes Lisa Su has a net worth of about  $354 Million dollars.

Lisa Su Arrest and Conspiracy

A Chinese national by the name of Su Bin, also known as Stephen Su and Stephen Subin, has pleaded guilty today to being part of a conspiracy that spanned years and involved hacking into the computer networks of major defense contractors in the United States.

The sensitive military and export-controlled data that was stolen was then sent to China. Su Bin is 50 years old and is a citizen and resident of the People’s Republic of China. The guilty plea happened in front of U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder of the Central District of California.

The person who was arrested was not Lisa Su but Su Bin. Lisa is one of the greatest CEO in the world.

Follow Lisa Su on twitter

Find out what happened to Jimmy Carey

Kim Kardashian -Real Name

August Alsina