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Lynn Conway

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Lynn Conway
Lynn Conway in front of a white background. She is a middle-aged white woman with reddish blonde hair, wearing a colorful .
Conway in 2006
Born(1938-01-02)January 2, 1938
DiedJune 9, 2024(2024-06-09) (aged 86)
Alma materColumbia University
Known for
Spouse
Charles Rogers
(m. 2002)
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions

Lynn Ann Conway (January 2, 1938 – June 9, 2024) was an American computer scientist, electrical engineer, and transgender activist.

Conway worked at IBM in the 1960s and invented generalized dynamic instruction handling, a key advancement used in out-of-order execution, used by most modern computer processors to improve performance. IBM fired Conway in 1968 after she revealed her intention to undergo a gender transition.

After completing her transition she took a new name and identity and restarted her career. She joined Xerox PARC in 1973, where she led the "LSI Systems" group. She initiated the Mead–Conway VLSI chip design revolution in very large-scale integrated (VLSI) microchip design. That revolution spread rapidly through the research universities and computing industries during the 1980s, incubating an emerging electronic design automation industry, spawning the modern 'foundry' infrastructure for chip design and production, and triggering a rush of impactful high-tech startups in the 1980s and 1990s.

She began quietly coming out in 1999 and began working in transgender activism. In 2020, IBM apologized for firing her 52 years earlier.

Early life and education

[edit]

Conway was born in Mount Vernon, New York, on January 2, 1938.[2][3][4] Raised as a boy, Conway was brought up in White Plains, New York, as a shy child who experienced gender dysphoria. She became fascinated by astronomy (building a 6-inch (150 mm) reflector telescope one summer) and did well in math and science in high school. Conway entered MIT in 1955, earning high grades but ultimately leaving in despair after an attempted gender transition from male to female in 1957–58. After working as an electronics technician for several years, Conway resumed education at Columbia University's School of Engineering and Applied Science, earning B.S. and M.S.E.E. degrees in 1962 and 1963.[5][6]

Early research at IBM

[edit]

Conway was recruited by IBM Research in Yorktown Heights, New York, in 1964, and was soon selected to join the architecture team designing an advanced supercomputer, working alongside John Cocke, Brian Randell, Herbert Schorr, Ed Sussenguth, Fran Allen and other IBM researchers on the Advanced Computing Systems (ACS) project, inventing multiple-issue out-of-order dynamic instruction scheduling while working there.[7][8][9][10][11] The Computer History Museum has stated that "The ACS architecture ... appears to have been the first 'superscalar' design".[12]

Gender transition

[edit]

After learning of the pioneering research of Harry Benjamin in healthcare for transsexual women and realizing that gender affirmation surgery was now possible, Conway sought his help. Suffering from severe depression from gender dysphoria, Conway contacted Benjamin, who agreed to provide counseling and prescribe hormones. Under Benjamin's care, Conway began her medical gender transition.[13]

While struggling with life in a male role, Conway had been married to a woman and had two children. Under the legal constraints then in place, she was denied access to their children after transitioning.[13]

Although she had hoped to be allowed to transition on the job, IBM fired Conway in 1968 after she revealed her intention to transition.[14] IBM apologized for this in 2020.[15]

Career as computer scientist

[edit]

Upon completing her transition in 1968, Conway took a new name and identity and restarted her career in what she called "stealth-mode" as a contract programmer at Computer Applications, Inc. She went on to work at Memorex during 1969–1972 as a digital system designer and computer architect.[13][16]

Conway joined Xerox PARC in 1973, where she led the "LSI Systems" group under Bert Sutherland.[17][18] When in PARC, Conway founded the multiproject wafers (MPW) technology. This new technology made it possible to pack multiple circuit designs from various sources into one single silicon wafer. Her new invention increased production and decreased costs.[19] Collaborating with Ivan Sutherland and Carver Mead of Caltech on VLSI design methodology, she co-authored Introduction to VLSI Systems, a groundbreaking work that would soon become a standard textbook in chip design, used in nearly 120 universities by 1983.[20][21][22][23] With over 70,000 copies sold, and the new integration of her MPC79/MOSIS innovations, the Mead and Conway revolution became part of VLSI design.[21][24]

In 1978, Conway served as a visiting associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science at MIT, teaching a now famous VLSI design course based on a Mead–Conway text draft.[13] The course validated the new design methods and textbook and established the syllabus and instructor's guidebook used in later courses worldwide.[25][26]

Among Conway's contributions was the invention of dimensionless, scalable design rules that greatly simplified chip design and design tools,[8][6][27] and invention of a new form of internet-based infrastructure for rapid prototyping and short-run fabrication of large numbers of chip designs.[8][28] The problem they were solving was how to cope with the increasing complexity of chip design while the number of transistors per chip doubled every two years as Gordon Moore (chairman of Intel) had predicted in 1965. The design methods in use in the semiconductor industry were rapidly running out of steam.[29] The new infrastructure was institutionalized as the Metal Oxide Semiconductor Implementation Service (MOSIS) system in 1981. Two years into its success, Mead and Conway received Electronics magazine's annual award of achievement.[30] Since then, MOSIS has fabricated more than 50,000 circuit designs for commercial firms, government agencies, and research and educational institutions around the world.[31] VLSI researcher Charles Seitz commented that "MOSIS represented the first period since the pioneering work of Eckert and Mauchley on the ENIAC in the late 1940s that universities and small companies had access to state-of-the-art digital technology."[28]

The research methods used to develop the Mead–Conway VLSI design methodology and the MOSIS prototype are documented in a 1981 Xerox report[32] and the Euromicro Journal.[33] The Mead–Conway work's impact is described in several historical overviews of computing.[28][34][35][36][37][38] Conway and her colleagues have compiled an online archive of original papers that documents much of that work.[39][40] The methods also came under ethnographic study in 1980 by PARC anthropologist Lucy Suchman, who published her interviews with Conway in 2021.[41][42]

In the early 1980s, Conway left Xerox to join DARPA, where she was a key architect of the Defense Department's Strategic Computing Initiative, a research program studying high-performance computing, autonomous systems technology, and intelligent weapons technology.[6][43]

In a USA Today article about Conway's joining DARPA, Mark Stefik, a Xerox scientist who worked with her, said "Lynn would like to live five lives in the course of one life" and that she's "charismatic and very energetic".[44] Douglas Fairbairn, a former Xerox associate, said "She figures out a way so that everybody wins."[44]

As sociologist Thomas Streeter discusses in The Net Effect when commenting on Conway's DARPA job:[45] "By taking this job, Conway was demonstrating that she was no antiwar liberal. (In response to critics, she has said, 'if you have to fight, and sometimes you must in order to deal with bad people, history tells us that it really helps to have the best weapons available'). But Conway carried a sense of computers as tools for horizontal communications that she had absorbed at PARC right into DARPA – at one of the hottest moments of the cold war."

Conway joined the University of Michigan in 1985 as professor of electrical engineering and computer science and associate dean of engineering. There, she worked on "visual communications and control probing for basic system and user-interface concepts as applicable to hybridized internet/broadband-cable communications".[6] She retired from active teaching and research in 1998 as professor emerita at Michigan.[46][47]

Legacy

[edit]

The Mead–Conway VLSI chip design revolution spread rapidly through the research universities and computing industries during the 1980s, incubating an emerging electronic design automation industry, spawning the modern 'foundry' infrastructure for chip design and production, and triggering a rush of impactful high-tech startups in the 1980s and 1990s.[7][8][9][12][48]

In the fall of 2012, the IEEE published a special issue of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Magazine devoted to Lynn Conway's career,[49][50] including a career memoir by Conway[14] and peer commentaries by Chuck House,[51] former Director of Engineering at HP, Carlo Séquin, Professor of EECS at U.C. Berkeley,[52] and Ken Shepard, of Columbia University.[53] Subsequently the scope of Conway's contributions gained wider retrospective attention. "Since I didn't #LookLikeanEngineer, few people caught on to what I was really doing back in the 70s and 80s," says Conway.[15]

"Clearly a new paradigm had emerged ... Importantly, imaginative support in terms of infrastructure and idea dissemination proved as valuable as the concepts, tools, and chips. The 'electronic book' and the 'foundry' were both prescient and necessary, providing momentum and proof-points."[51] James F. "Jim" Gibbons, former dean of engineering at Stanford University, further states that Lynn Conway, from his perspective, "was the singular force behind the entire 'foundry' development that emerged."[51] Kenneth Shepard, Professor of Biomedical and Electrical Engineering at Columbia University, stated that "Lynn's amazing story of accomplishment and personal triumph in the face of personal adversity and overt discrimination should serve as an inspiration to all young engineers."[53][54]

In 2020, NAE President John L. Anderson stated that "Lynn Conway is not only a revolutionary pioneer in the design of VLSI systems ... But just as important, Lynn has been very brave in telling her own story, and her perseverance has been a reminder to society that it should not be blind to the innovations of women, people of color, or others who don't fit long outdated – but unfortunately, persistent – perceptions of what an engineer looks like."[15]

Conway named the phenomenon of women and people of color being overlooked in historical accounts of innovations "the Conway Effect."[55] She described it in the IEEE Computer Society's Computer magazine: "This is seldom deliberate—rather, it's a result of the accumulation of advantage by those who are expected to innovate."[55]

In 2023, Lynn Conway collaborated with Jim Boulton to create Lines in the Sand,[56] a short comic book that tells the story of Conway's groundbreaking invention of Very Large-Scale Integration (VLSI). The launch event[57] took place at the Centre for Computing History on November 23, 2023.

Transgender activism

[edit]

When nearing retirement, Conway learned that the story of her early work at IBM might soon be revealed through the investigations of Mark Smotherman that were being prepared for a 2001 publication.[7] She began quietly coming out in 1999 to friends and colleagues about her past gender transition,[58][59][60] using her website to tell the story in her own words.[5] Her story was then more widely reported in 2000 in profiles in Scientific American[10] and the Los Angeles Times.[13] In a later Forbes interview, Conway commented "From the 1970s to 1999 I was recognized as breaking the gender barrier in the computer science field as a woman, but in 2000 it became the transgender barrier I was breaking."[15]

After going public with her story, she began work in transgender activism, intending to "illuminate and normalize the issues of gender identity and the processes of gender transition".[61] She worked to protect and expand the rights of transgender people. She provided direct and indirect assistance to numerous other transgender women going through transition and maintained a website providing medical resources and emotional advice. Parts have been translated into most of the world's major languages.[62] She maintained a listing of many successful post-transition transgender people, to, in her words "provide role models for individuals who are facing gender transition".[63] Her website also provided news related to transgender issues and information on sex reassignment surgery for transsexual women, facial feminization surgery, academic inquiries into the prevalence of transsexualism[64] and transgender and transsexual issues in general.[65][66]

She also advocated for equal opportunities and employment protections for transgender people in high-technology industry,[67][68][69][70][71][72] and for elimination of the pathologization of transgender people by the psychiatric community.[73][74]

Conway was a critic of the Blanchard, Bailey, and Lawrence theory of male-to-female transsexualism that all trans women are motivated either by feminine homosexuality or autogynephilia.[75] Along with American transgender rights activist Andrea James and University of Chicago economics professor Deirdre McCloskey, she was also a key person in the campaign against J. Michael Bailey's book about the theory, The Man Who Would Be Queen.[76][77] Conway and McCloskey wrote letters to Northwestern University, accusing Bailey of "conducting intimate research observations on human subjects without telling them that they were objects of the study."[75] American bioethicist Alice Dreger, in her book Galileo's Middle Finger, criticized Conway for filing a lawsuit against Bailey which had "no legal basis", referring to her allegation that Bailey lacked a license as a clinical psychologist when he wrote letters in support of a young trans woman seeking to transition. According to Dreger, as Bailey did not receive compensation for his services, he would not have needed a license in Illinois and was "completely forthright in his letters supporting the women, both about the fact that he had only had brief conversations with them (as opposed to having provided them with extensive counseling) and about his own qualifications and expertise ... [and] even attached copies of his CV." As Dreger argues, "presumably all this was why [Illinois] never bothered to pursue the charge."[78] In response, Conway argued that Dreger "deflects attention away from Bailey's book and the massive trans community protest, and caricatures the entire controversy as nothing more than a vicious effort by three rather witch-like women to 'ruin the life' of a brilliant scientist."[79]

Conway was a cast member in the first all-transgender performance of The Vagina Monologues in Los Angeles in 2004,[80] and appeared in a LOGO-Channel documentary film about that event entitled Beautiful Daughters.[58][81]

In 2009, Conway was named one of the "Stonewall 40 trans heroes" on the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall riots by the International Court System, one of the oldest and largest predominantly gay organizations in the world, and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.[82][83]

In 2013, with support from many hi-tech thought-leaders, Conway and Leandra Vicci of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill lobbied the directors of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the world's largest professional engineering society, for transgender inclusion in the IEEE's code of ethics.[84] The code, known within the profession as much as a code of honor as one of ethics, became fully LGBT inclusive in January 2014.[85][86][87]

In 2014, Time Magazine named Conway as one of "21 Transgender People Who Influenced American Culture".[88]

In 2015, she was selected for inclusion in "The Trans100"[89] and was interviewed in 2020 for inclusion in the Trans Activism Oral History Project.[90]

In 2020, 52 years after IBM fired her for being transgender, IBM publicly apologized to Conway; IBM held a public event "Tech Trailblazer and Transgender Pioneer Lynn Conway in conversation with Diane Gherson", then IBM's senior VP of HR. At the event, Lynn was awarded the IBM Lifetime Achievement Award for her work at IBM and later work.[91]

Personal life and death

[edit]

In 1987, Conway met her husband Charles "Charlie" Rogers, a professional engineer who shared her interest in the outdoors, including whitewater canoeing and motocross racing.[13][92] They soon started living together and bought a house with 24 acres (9.7 ha) of meadow, marsh, and woodland in rural Michigan in 1994.[13] They were married on August 13, 2002.[11][58][93] In 2014, the University of Michigan's The Michigan Engineer alumni magazine documented the connections between Conway's engineering explorations and the adventures in her personal life.[94][95]

Conway died from a heart condition at her home in Jackson, Michigan, on June 9, 2024, at the age of 86.[96][97]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Conway received a number of awards and distinctions:

Selected works

[edit]
  • Mead, Carver; Conway, Lynn (1980). Introduction to VLSI Systems. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0201043580.
  • Conway, L. (February 1981). "THE MPC ADVENTURES: Experiences with the Generation of VLSI Design and Implementation Methodologies" (PDF). Xerox PARC Technical Report VLSI-81-2.
  • Conway, L. (September 23, 1982). "The Design of VLSI Design Methods" (PDF). Proc. VUB European Solid-State Circuits Conference (Invited Lecture). Vrije Universiteit Brüssel, Brussels, Belgium: 106–117.
  • Conway, Lynn (2012). "Reminiscences of the VLSI Revolution: How a Series of Failures Triggered a Paradigm Shift in Digital Design" (PDF). Solid-State Circuits Magazine. Vol. 4, no. 4. IEEE. pp. 8–31. doi:10.1109/MSSC.2012.2215752.
  • Conway, L. (October 2018). "The Disappeared: Beyond Winning and Losing". Computer. Vol. 51. IEEE Computer Society. pp. 66–73.
  • Conway, Lynn (2011). "IBM-ACS: Reminiscences and Lessons Learned from a 1960's Supercomputer Project" (PDF). In Jones, C. B.; Lloyd, J. L. (eds.). Dependable and Historic Computing: Essays Dedicated to Brian Randell on the Occasion of his 75th Birthday. Springer-Verlag. pp. 185–224. ISBN 978-3-642-24541-1.
  • Conway, Lynn. "Lynn Conway's IBM-ACS Archive". University of Michigan. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Conway, L.; Randell, Brian; Senzig, D. (February 23, 1966). "Dynamic Instruction Scheduling" (PDF). IBM-ACS.
  • Rozenberg, D.; Conway, L.; Riekert, R. (March 15, 1966). "ACS Simulation Technique" (PDF). IBM-ACS.
  • Conway, L. (August 25, 1967). "MPM Timing Simulation" (PDF). IBM-ACS.
  • Conway, L. (November 29, 1967). "ACS Logic Design Conventions: A Guide for the Novice" (PDF). IBM-ACS.
  • Conway, L (October 31, 1967). "A Proposed ACS Logic Simulation System" (PDF). IBM-ACS.
  • Conway, L. (August 6, 1968). "The Computer Design Process: A Proposed Plan for ACS" (PDF). IBM-ACS.

Patents

[edit]
  • US 5046022, Conway, Lynn; Volz, Richard & Walker, Michael, "Teleautonomous System and Method Employing Time/Position Synchrony/Desynchrony", issued September 3, 1991. 
  • US 5444476, Conway, Lynn, "System and Method for Teleinteraction", issued August 22, 1995 
  • US 5652849, Conway, Lynn & Cohen, Charles, "Apparatus and Method for Remote Control Using a Visual Information Stream", issued July 20, 1997 
  • US 5719622, Conway, Lynn, "Visual Control Selection of Remote Mechanisms", issued February 17, 1998 
  • US 5745782, Conway, Lynn, "Method and System for Organizing and Presenting Audio/Visual Information", issued April 28, 1998 

References

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Further reading

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