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Alan Shugart

Alan Field Shugart (September 27, 1930 – December 12, 2006) was a leading computer engineer in the disk drive industry. He was widely considered as one of the leading pioneers in the field of disk drives. Since it is unusual to hear of the death of any of major figures in the relatively young industry of personal computers, Mr Shugart's passing was widely covered around the world.

Life

Born in Los Angeles, California, he began his career at IBM in San José, California, and rose through a series of increasingly important positions to become the Direct Access Storage Product Manager, the business person in IBM responsible for its disk storage products, IBM's most profitable business at that time. Among the several groups reporting to Shugart was the team that invented the floppy disk. He was the founder of Shugart Associates in 1973, later acquired by Xerox. Then he and Finis Conner started Shugart Technology in 1979, which soon changed its name to Seagate Technology. With Shugart as Chief Executive Officer, Seagate became the world’s largest independent manufacturer of disk drives and related components. In July 1998, Shugart resigned his positions with Seagate.[1]

"(Shugart's) first disk drive had five megabytes. He couldn't get any money then because nobody thought the world would ever need five megabytes of storage. Here's a guy who thought you not only needed five megs, but you would ultimately need a whole lot more. And he was right," Seagate chief executive Bill Watkins told Los Angeles Times reporter Alex Pham.

Shugart was a graduate of the University of Redlands, receiving a degree in engineering physics. In 1996 he launched an unsuccessful campaign to elect Ernest, his Bernese Mountain Dog to Congress. Shugart later wrote about that experience in a book, Ernest Goes to Washington (Well, Not Exactly). He backed a failed ballot initiative in 2000 to give California voters the option of choosing "none of the above" in elections.[2]

Shugart died on December 12, 2006 in San José, California of complications from heart surgery he had undergone six weeks earlier.[3]

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