James D. Y. Collier

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James Collier
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Born Lua error in Module:Wikidata at line 446: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
December 1958 (age 65)[1]
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James Digby Yarlet Collier (born December 1958)[1] FRS[2] FREng is a microelectronics engineer and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Neul Limited.[3] Previously, he held several technical and executive positions at Cambridge Silicon Radio (CSR), UbiNetics, Cambridge Consultants and Schlumberger [4][5][6]

Education

Collier was educated at the University of Oxford where he was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Physics.[5][when?]

Career

Collier has been active in and at the forefront of microelectronics system design for over 20 years, during which time the feature sizes of devices have fallen 100-fold from 2 micrometres to 20 nanometres. This discipline is a cross-over between detailed engineering and applied physics as engineering constraints and imperfections interact with the desired function, be it measurement or communications.[2]

Collier co-founded CSR as a corporate spin-off from Cambridge Consultants Limited with a group of eight other people including Glenn Collinson, Phil O'Donovan, Jonathan Kimmitt, Carl Orsborn, Ian Sabberton, Justin Penfold, Robert Young and Graham Pink.[7] He served as CTO of CSR which was acquired by Qualcomm in 2015.[6] Using short-range wireless technology, CSR became a major supplier of integrated circuit designs for Bluetooth, GPS and Wi-Fi.[7] As a fabless manufacturing company, CSR created the first production ready, single chip, CMOS implementation of the Bluetooth standard[8] by putting a radio transmitter, microprocessor and baseband on a single integrated circuit.[7] The techniques developed are now commonplace and included in many consumer wireless devices.[2]

Between 1984 and 1999, Collier held executive and technical positions at Cambridge Consultants, where he started the microelectronics group in 1987. Prior to 1984, Collier held a number of executive and technical positions at Schlumberger.[8] Collier also served as director UbiNetics IP Ltd from 2005.[1]

In 2010, Collier set up Neul Limited with Glenn Collinson with £8 million in initial investment to exploit machine to machine (M2M) communication in the weightless wireless communcations market.[7][9] Neul is based in Cambridge Science Park and develops wireless network technology to enable the use of the white space spectrum.[1][3][10] Neul was acquired by Huawei in 2014.[3]

Awards and honours

In 2005, Collier won the MacRobert Award with his CSR colleagues John Hodgson, Phil O’Donovan, Glenn Collinson and Chris Ladas for their work on Bluecore.[11][12][13] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2016[2] and is also a Fellow of the Institute of Engineering and Technology (FIET) and a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng).[5]

References

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    “All text published under the heading 'Biography' on Fellow profile pages is available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.” --Royal Society Terms, conditions and policies at the Wayback Machine (archived September 25, 2015)

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  10. James Collier, Co-Founder of Neul Ltd on YouTube, Cambridge Judge Business School
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