David Lautenschlager has had a long and successful career in the engineering field. David began their career in 1985 as a Design Engineer at Westinghouse Electronics Systems Group, where they developed ASIC, FPGA, and board designs for radar signal processing avionics. In 1996, they moved to Sanders, A Lockheed Martin Company, where they developed ASIC, FPGA, and board designs for embedded processor and signal processing avionics. In 2000, they joined Intel Corporation as a Micro Architect and Senior Design Engineer. At Intel, they worked on configurable IP blocks used in next-generation 10nm Xeon server processors, and was the micro-architect and lead design engineer for soft IP blocks used in mobile, desktop, and server chipset Platform Controller Hub (PCH) products. In 2019, they joined Netronome as a Lead Silicon Design Engineer, where they were the design owner of Netronome's custom embedded flow-processor core, and the cache micro-architect for the next-generation network processor architecture using an open-source RISC processor core.
David Lautenschlager received their Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from Lehigh University in 1985 and their Master of Science in Electrical Engineering in Computer Engineering from The Johns Hopkins University in 1992.
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