HALL OF FAME / inventor profile

Robert Metcalfe
Born April 7, 1946

Multipoint Data Communication System with Collision Detection
Patent #: 5,171,534

Inducted 2007

Robert Metcalfe invented, standardized, and commercialized Ethernet. Developed as a way to link the computers at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center to one another, Ethernet uses digital packets and distributed controls to transmit data over what would become the most widely used local area network, or LAN.

Invention Impact

Metcalfe left Xerox in 1979 to found 3Com Corporation to manufacture LAN equipment with Ethernet technology, retiring in 1990. He is now with Polaris Venture Partners, fostering information technology start-ups. Metcalfe was awarded the National Medal of Technology in 2005 for his leadership in the invention, standardization, and commercialization of Ethernet.

Inventor Bio

Metcalfe was born in Brooklyn, New York. He studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, earning bachelor degrees in electrical engineering and industrial management before completing his Master and Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1973. Working with associates at PARC on some of the earliest personal computers, Metcalfe invented one of the first and now most widely deployed networking technologies, Ethernet. Today, over a quarter billion new Ethernet switch ports are shipped annually worldwide.



© 2002 National Inventors Hall of Fame