INTEL, AMERICA’S semiconductor large, has had some notable bosses. Robert Noyce, its first, invented the silicon chip that gave Silicon Valley its title. Gordon Moore, who got here subsequent, etched his place in tech lore with a prediction—Moore’s Legislation—that processing energy would double each two years on the similar value. Andy Grove, the third boss, turned Intel right into a semiconductor juggernaut, pushed by the mantra that “solely the paranoid survive.” The newest to affix this lineage is Lip-Bu Tan, who took over in March.