Charles Denis Mee is an engineer, physicist, and author who is noted for his contributions in the areas of magnetic recording and data storage on hard disk drives. A large part of his career was with IBM in San Jose California. He is the author or editor on several books on magnetic recording.
From 1951 to 1957, Denis Mee worked for M.S.S. in Colnbrook, UK in the field of Magnetics. In 1957, he emigrated to the United States to join Columbia Broadcasting System Laboratories where he became Technical Director of the Magnetics Group. In 1964, he received the IRE Audio Society Award for his work on high-density audio stereo tape recording. Mee joined IBM Research at Yorktown Heights in 1962 as a research staff member. Three years later, he transferred to the IBM Advanced Technology group in San Jose, California. He subsequently contributed to and managed several ground-breaking data storage technology programs such as thin-film heads for hard disk drives and several types of optical storage technologies. In 1982 Mee was a co-founder and first director of IBM's Magnetic Recording Institute, one of the first of 19 joint programs at IBM, in this case focused on storage technology. He was appointed IBM Fellow in 1983. Mee retired from IBM in 1993 and has since been a consultant to and participant in joint industry-university magnetic and optical data storage programs. He led IBM's efforts in the early 1980s to establish University Research Centers in magnetic and optical storage including ones at the Center for Magnetic Recording Research at UC San Diego and the Data Storage Systems Center at Carnegie Mellon University. He is a co-founder and first chairman of the board of the National Storage Industry Consortium founded in 1991 to enhance industry competitiveness thru cooperation between universities and industry. Mee is one of the founding members of and has been a major contributor to the at the Computer History Museum, Mountain View, California. Mee's son, Robert C. Mee, is the founder and CEO of Pivotal Software
Awards and recognition
In 1964, Mee received the Institute of Radio Engineers Audio Society Award "for outstanding work on high-density audio stereo tape recording". He was made a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers for his "extraordinary record of accomplishments" in 1970. He was also placed on the IT History SocietyHonor Roll as a "key technologist and pioneer in the computer industry". He received an IBM Corporate Recognition Award in 1980. Denis Mee became an IBM Fellow in 1983. In 1994 he received the IEEE Reynold B. Johnson Information Storage Systems Award "for contributions to the design of optical, magneto-optical, and magnetic recording files". In 1996, he became a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a list of "the world's most accomplished engineers", for "contributions to magnetic storage and the development of thin-film heads". In 2000, he received the IEEE Magnetics Society Achievement Award. for "his technical accomplishments and his services to the magnetics community".
Books and publications
Among the books Denis Mee has authored, co-authored or edited are:
“Physics of Magnetic Recording”, North Holland Pub. Co.
“Magnetic Recording”, McGraw-Hill edited with Eric D. Daniel