Rich Page

Richard Page (born 1951) is a hardware engineer who was part of the Apple Lisa development team and also contributed to the Macintosh at Apple Computer. He became an Apple Fellow in 1983.

Early life and education
Page was born in in 1951 and grew up in, near San Francisco. He received his bachelor's degrees in math and physics and master's degree in computer science from San Jose State University.

Career
Page first worked at while still in college in 1972. He was then recruited by John Couch to work on the minicomputer at Hewlett-Packard.

Apple Computer
Page was recruited by co-founder Steve Jobs to join Apple Computer at the urging of Couch, who himself had joined Apple in 1978. Page became responsible for the decision to use the Motorola 68000 processor in the Lisa and the first Macintosh 128K. He then prototyped Apple's first portable computer and 68020-based system. The 68020 prototype, named "Big Mac", was used to develop MacPaint 2.0. However, it was passed over for a NuBus slot-based design that was used for the Macintosh II.

After Apple
When Steve Jobs left the company in 1985, Page also left and joined Jobs as a founding member of NeXT. As Vice President of Digital Hardware Engineering, Page was responsible for developing the NeXTcube and NeXTstation. He left NeXT in 1992, shortly before its hardware division was closed.

Page became executive chairman of Chowbotics, a food preparation robotics company.