Stephen P. Morse is the architect of the Intel 8086 chip.
He has degrees in Electrical Engineering from CCNY, the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn and New York University. He has worked for Bell Laboratories, IBM's Watson Research Center and GE Corporate Research and Development.
In recent years, he has applied his technology expertise to Web-based Genealogy Search Tools. His "One Step" Search Pages are widely used by genealogists all over the world. He is also the co-author with linguist Alexander Beider of the Beider–Morse Phonetic Name Matching Algorithm.[1][2]
He is quoted as saying that
"While I'd like to think that the PC wouldn't exist today if I hadn't designed the 8086, the reality is that it would be based on some other processor family. The instruction set would be radically different, but there would still be a PC. I was just fortunate enough to be at the right place at the right time."[3]
In an interview with CSEA, IIT Guwahati 2011, on being questioned about how he sees the future of computing, he replied,
"In the next fifty years, the future will be fascinating and you are all going to be a part of it."