The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20220904103140/https://spectrum.ieee.org/note-from-the-editors

On 17 March 2022, we published two first-person accounts from Ukrainian IEEE members Hanna Porieva and Volodymyr Pyliavskyi as well as a Q&A with IEEE Siberian Section member Roman L. Gorbunov. Our main intention with this collection, which we titled “Stories from the War in Ukraine,” was to alert IEEE members around the world about the plight of their Ukrainian peers trying to survive the Russian invasion.

We decided to include the interview with Gorbunov to give readers insight into the thinking of a professional engineer living under a regime that controls its population through propaganda, disinformation, and coercion. Many readers, though, did not see things that way. Several wrote to say that they interpreted our decision to publish as tacit support for the views expressed or willful propagation of misinformation. That’s understandable: We apologize for not providing adequate context at the time of publication.

Our initial response to the first comments was to add an editor’s note at the top of Gorbunov’s piece pointing out that his views are at odds with international reporting on the war. We also directed readers to a source for reliable civilian casualty statistics.

Many readers were coming to the piece through social media and never realized that we had also published Porieva’s and Pyliavskyi’s accounts. So in addition to publishing this post to clarify our intentions and to apologize to readers, we encourage you to engage with the stories Porieva and Pyliavskyi worked so hard under perilous circumstances to provide to us and to you.

We encourage our readers to continue to follow our coverage of events in Ukraine. IEEE Spectrum and the Institute remain focused on publishing important and insightful news and analysis and we are committed to continuing to improve the way we report these stories by providing context and background to better inform and engage our readers.

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The Godfather of South Korea’s Chip Industry

How Kim Choong-Ki helped the nation become a semiconductor superpower

15 min read
A man in a dark suit, bald with some grey hair, leans against a shiny blue wall, in which he is reflected.

Kim Choong-Ki, now an emeritus professor at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, was the first professor in South Korea to systematically teach semiconductor engineering.

Korea Academy of Science and Technology
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They were called “Kim’s Mafia.” Kim Choong-Ki himself wouldn’t have put it that way. But it was true what semiconductor engineers in South Korea whispered about his former students: They were everywhere.

Starting in the mid-1980s, as chip manufacturing in the country accelerated, engineers who had studied under Kim at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) assumed top posts in the industry as well as coveted positions teaching or researching semiconductors at universities and government institutes. By the beginning of the 21st century, South Korea had become a dominant power in the global semiconductor market, meeting more than 60 percent of international demand for memory chips alone. Around the world, many of Kim’s protégés were lauded for their brilliant success in transforming the economy of a nation that had just started assembling radio sets in 1959 and was fabricating outdated memory chips in the early ’80s.

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