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A tribute to Dado Banatao Rice farmer's son who built internet age

Manila Bulletin

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January 4,2026

If you are reading this on a computer or a smartphone, you are looking at the digital fingerprints of Diosdado "Dado" Banatao.

A tribute to Dado Banatao Rice farmer's son who built internet age

He didn't just participate in the digital revolution; he designed the hardware that made it possible.

From the dirt tracks of Cagayan Valley to the high-stakes boardrooms of Silicon Valley, Banatao's life was a masterclass in what happens when raw grit meets high-level physics. A tech titan who never forgot his roots, Banatao passed away on Dec. 25, 2025, at 79 in the United States (US), leaving behind a legacy that remains the bedrock of the modern computing era. To understand the man is to understand the very "pipes" of the internet and the silicon logic that dictates our daily lives.

Banatao was the son of a rice farmer and a housekeeper in Malabbac, Iguig. His early years were defined by walking barefoot to school—a reality that stayed with him even after he began flying his own planes and funding multi-million dollar startups. In the rural landscape of the Philippines, the horizon was often limited to the next harvest, but Banatao saw further.

"My inspiration came from my father, who was just a simple farmer, but he climbed his way up so that we could go to school," Banatao once shared. "My passion for studying and working hard came from my family... I did not give up, and my father did not give up either."

After earning his Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from Mapúa Institute of Technology, Banatao's journey took him to the US as a design engineer for Boeing, where he worked on the flight control systems for the Boeing 747. But the cockpit of a plane wasn't enough; he wanted to get inside the "brain" of the machine. He pursued a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University, the literal and figurative heart of the emerging tech boom.

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