
At most dinners, introductions start with your name and maybe what you do.
At this one, we began with:
“Second edition.”
“Fourth edition.”
Why? Because this was our “School of Fish – Legends of Semiconductors” dinner, hosted at our home, where your relationship with the Sedra & Smith textbook was the common thread.
(I’m second edition, if you’re wondering.)
We were incredibly honoured to have Dr. Adel Sedra, former Dean of Engineering at the University of Waterloo, join us. Recently appointed to the Order of Canada, Dr. Sedra is a towering figure in the world of electrical engineering. Since 1982, his textbook has taught more than three-quarters of the world’s electrical engineers. It is hard to find someone in the field who has not studied from it. I consider myself extraordinarily fortunate, not just to have learned from his book, but to have been his student more than 30 years ago at the University of Toronto. Few have had the privilege of learning directly from a legend.

We were equally honoured to host Benny Lau, co-founder of ATI Technologies, whose legacy lives on in AMD’s GPUs to this day. AMD acquired ATI for $5.4 billion nearly 20 years ago, still one of the largest tech acquisitions in Canadian history. When Eva worked at ATI, she had the chance to work closely with Benny. His presence brought our conversation full circle, from classroom to commercialization. Adding even more depth to the evening, Benny was also once a student of Dr. Sedra. Two generations of engineers at the same table, both shaped by the same teacher.

From left to right: Benny Lau, Eva Lau, Ljubisa Bajic
This evening was also a chance to reconnect with those who shaped my own journey. Martin Snelgrove and Raymond Chik, my professor and TA respectively, were both there and are now serial entrepreneurs. They are also co-founders of Hepzibah, a Two Small Fish portfolio company. (I still can’t help but sometimes call him Professor Snelgrove.) Xerxes Wania, another one of my TAs from back in the day, went on to build and exit two semiconductor companies and added his voice to the conversation.

From left to right: Xerxes Wania, Dr. Adel Sedra, Allen Lau, Martin Snelgrove, Raymond Chik
We were also joined by Ljubisa Bajic, former CEO of TensTorrent and now CEO of Taalas, who also spent part of his career at ATI, further adding to the thread that connected many of us. Chris Yip, Dean of Engineering at the University of Toronto, and Deepa Kundur, current Chair of U of T’s Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering—continuing the legacy of leadership that Dr. Sedra once held in that position—also attended. Professor Tony Chan Carusone, now also CTO of Alphawave Semi and coauthor of the Sedra & Smith textbook starting with the 8th edition, brought both academic and commercial perspectives to the table.
From the TSF portfolio side, we were thrilled to have Professor Doug Barlage of the University of Alberta and Professor Chris Eliasmith of the University of Waterloo, co-founders of Zinite and ABR, respectively.
And of course, our partner Dr. Albert Chen joined us. He is a graduate of Waterloo Engineering and knows a thing or two about semiconductors himself.
Semiconductors brought us together that night.
Textbook and tapeout were what we talked about, and we all loved them.
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I would have liked to be a fly on the wall! Congratulations for the density of knowledge sitting side by side.
This is undoubtedly the highest PhD-density dinner I have ever hosted!