@ nimish,
You bring up an interesting topic, suggest you create a IEEE Circuits & Systems, or IEEE Proceedings paper on the subject of the Tektronix T-Coil and Ross's contributions or lack thereof.
I'm sure Professors Tom Lee, Hajimiri, Rodwell and others would welcome, critique and maybe even contribute, and we all would gather a much better understanding of what transpired back then and as you seem to infer maybe it's not that big a deal, altho HP couldn't solve this and you can bet they certainly tried!!
Even in hindsight Lee seemed to have some difficulty, per his comment here from Pease's article:
"A Tektronix engineer, whose name Lee can’t recall, wrote him and asked who at Tek told Lee about the T-coil derivation. Lee told him, “I did this independently, since you guys never published this stuff.” The Tek engineer said T-coils were a Tek trade secret, to which Lee responded, “I’ve got blood-soaked pages to prove that I did this on my own, because I did it wrong many more times than I did it right.” The Tek engineer then engaged in some good-natured ribbing that Lee only solved the symmetrical case, where both coils have the same value.
That engineer referred Lee to John Addis, of the Tektronix Museum near Portland. The engineer said that Addis was “Mr. T-coil.” Addis was Tek's most prolific and able designer of T-coil-based amplifiers, but he pointed Lee to Bob Ross as the engineer who had derived the equations. Addis then introduced Lee to Ross. Professor Lee recounts the story:
“That started a friendship with Bob, who told this amazing story that starts in China in the 1930s. There was this gifted engineer, K.T. Wang, who was way too smart to work on just his power plant management job. He made up electrical engineering brain teasers for himself and then solved them. Over years of doing this to keep his mind from turning into oatmeal, he noticed there was a pattern to some of these problems. They would be easy to set up, then horribly horrible to solve, and in the end the beast would collapse to something much simpler and very elegant. He wondered, ‘Is there a way to get to the end without going through the middle.’ So, he came up with these weird ad-hoc rules that enabled him to shortcut a lot of the ugly math.
“Not knowing anything about Wang, I had come up with my own method and published what is, as far as I know, the first T-coil derivation in the open literature [Planar Microwave Engineering, Ch. 12 Appendix, Cambridge Press, 2004]. It was not a general method. It was only good for the lossless symmetrical case; it cannot be gracefully extended to anything else. Tektronix had the Full Monty, the lossy asymmetrical case, and I wanted to figure out, who the heck did that, and how? I wanted to meet that guy. Well now I’ve met that guy, the brilliant Bob Ross."
Best,