Otis Boykin: Difference between revisions
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{{Biography | {{Biography | ||
|Image=OtisBoykin.gif | |Image=OtisBoykin.gif | ||
}} | |Birthdate=1920/08/29 | ||
|Birthplace=Dallas, TX, USA | |||
|Death date=1982 | |||
}} | |||
Otis Boykin was born on 29 August 1920 in Dallas, Texas. He attended both Fisk University and the Illinois Institute of Technology. Boykin worked on [[Resistor|resistors]] used in many electronic devices including computers and [[Television|television sets]]. He invented the variable resistor used in guided missiles and IBM computers. Other devices Boykin worked on included a burglar proof cash register, a chemical air filter, and a control unit for an artificial heart stimulator ([[Pacemaker|pacemaker]]). He worked for many American and Parisian firms throughout his career. | Otis Boykin was born on 29 August 1920 in Dallas, Texas. He attended both Fisk University and the Illinois Institute of Technology. Boykin worked on [[Resistor|resistors]] used in many electronic devices including computers and [[Television|television sets]]. He invented the variable resistor used in guided missiles and IBM computers. Other devices Boykin worked on included a burglar proof cash register, a chemical air filter, and a control unit for an artificial heart stimulator ([[Pacemaker|pacemaker]]). He worked for many American and Parisian firms throughout his career. | ||
Boykin died of heart failure in 1982. | Boykin died of heart failure in 1982. | ||
[[Category:Computing and electronics | |||
[[Category:Computing and electronics]] | |||
[[Category:Electronic components]] | |||
[[Category:Bioengineering]] | |||
[[Category:Biomedical equipment]] | |||
[[Category:Pacemakers]] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boykin}} |
Latest revision as of 16:08, 11 February 2016
Biography
Otis Boykin was born on 29 August 1920 in Dallas, Texas. He attended both Fisk University and the Illinois Institute of Technology. Boykin worked on resistors used in many electronic devices including computers and television sets. He invented the variable resistor used in guided missiles and IBM computers. Other devices Boykin worked on included a burglar proof cash register, a chemical air filter, and a control unit for an artificial heart stimulator (pacemaker). He worked for many American and Parisian firms throughout his career.
Boykin died of heart failure in 1982.