When David M. Shannon arrived in Silicon Valley in 1987, personal computers were still a novelty. Data was stored on floppy disks. The World Wide Web was in utero. And society was more than a decade away from an iAnything.
Silicon Valley soon morphed from a mecca of geekdom into the capital of the mainstream digital age. As it grew, Shannon had a hand in the legal affairs of some of its most cutting-edge chipmakers. Now executive vice p...
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