The engineer who left academia to build smarter chips

Published on May 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Maysam Ghovanloo, an expert in chip design, has made the leap from university research to the semiconductor industry. His goal is to create integrated circuits for specific applications, known as ASICs. This is not science fiction: these chips improve everything from your phone to medical equipment, making them more efficient and accessible for the average person. Innovation in silicon drives the technology we use daily.

circuit designer transferring chip blueprint from university lab to industrial cleanroom, engineer holding a silicon wafer with glowing ASIC layout projected above, robotic arm placing die onto test board, oscilloscope displaying neural signal waveforms, medical device prototype connected to chip, cinematic engineering visualization, hyper-detailed metallic surfaces, blue LED indicators, dust-free white room environment, dramatic side lighting, photorealistic technical illustration

How ASICs Redefine Efficiency in Everyday Devices ⚡

These integrated circuits are custom-designed for a single function, reducing power consumption and physical space in devices. For example, a chip specialized in processing audio signals allows your mobile phone to have better sound without draining extra battery. In the medical field, an ASIC can miniaturize sensors to monitor health in real time, lowering production costs. Ghovanloo bets on this approach to optimize devices without unnecessary generalities, offering concrete solutions.

When the Chip Becomes Smarter Than Its Owner 🤖

The curious thing is that these chips, designed to be efficient, sometimes make the user seem like a novice. Your phone knows when you're tired of searching for an app, and your heart monitor reminds you to breathe. Meanwhile, the engineer smiles from his lab, watching how a piece of silicon solves problems we didn't even know we had. At least now the microwave doesn't burn your pizza.