Education
He received a Master of Surgery in Electrical Engineering from University of Texas at Austin in 1991.
He received a Master of Surgery in Electrical Engineering from University of Texas at Austin in 1991.
He spent much of his career working at International Business Machines Corporation, where he was Chief Engineer and project co-lead for the PowerPC 601 microprocessor. He then led the POWER4 Chip Architecture project Moore received a Bachelor of Surgery degree in Electrical Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1983.
From 1984 to 2001, Moore worked at International Business Machines Corporation Corporation in Austin, Texas, with increasing responsibility and leadership on the design and development of International Business Machines Corporation microprocessors including PowerPC 601, POWER4, and others
After a stint at Chicory Systems, a startup in the mobile computing space, he returned to University of Texas at Austin as a Senior research fellowship In 2004, he joined Advanced Micro Devices where he served as Chief Engineer for the “Bulldozer” processor microarchitecture, and ultimately held the position of Corporate Fellow.
In 2007, Moore gave a plenary talk at the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Federated Computing Research Conferences (FCRC). In 2008, he gave a keynote address at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers/Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) International Symposium on Microarchitecture.
In 2012, Moore died of pancreatic cancer. and his career was memorialized in an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Micro article.