Pre-DEC During his studies at MIT, the
Office of Naval Research of the
United States Department of the Navy recruited Olsen to help build a computerized flight simulator. Also while at MIT, he directed the building of the first
transistorized research computer, the
TX-0. Olsen was an engineer who had been working at
MIT Lincoln Laboratory on the
TX-2 project. Unlike the 18-bit TX-0, which was "designed to be a predecessor for a larger 36 bit machine, the TX-2," Whirlwind and the MTC used 16 bits. Olsen valued humility, driving an economy car and keeping a simple office in an old mill building. He also was an accomplished pilot and flew his own plane. In 1977, referring to computers used in home automation at the dawn of the home computer era, Olsen is quoted as saying "There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in his home." Olsen admitted to making the remark, even though he says his words were taken out of context and he was referring to computers set up to control houses, not PCs. In 1986,
Fortune Magazine named Olsen "America's most successful entrepreneur", and the same year he received the
IEEE Engineering Leadership Recognition Award. Olsen was the subject of a 1988 biography,
The Ultimate Entrepreneur: The Story of Ken Olsen and Digital Equipment Corporation written by Glenn Rifkin and George Harrar. In 1993, the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers awarded Olsen their
IEEE Founders Medal. He was inducted as a Fellow of the
Computer History Museum in 1996. He was awarded the
Vermilye Medal in 1980. He was inducted as an Honorary Member of UPE (the International Honor Society for the Computing and Information Sciences) on October 8, 1975. In 2011, he was listed at #6 on the
MIT150 list of the top 150 innovators and ideas from
MIT for his work on the
minicomputer. ==Later career history==