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Keynote
Speakers
Vinod Khosla
Vinod grew up dreaming of being an entrepreneur, despite growing up in
an Indian Army household with no business or technology connections.
Since age 16, when he first heard about Intel starting up, he dreamt
of starting his own technology company. Upon graduating with a Bachelors
in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology,
Delhi, he failed, at age 20, to start a soy milk company to service
the many people in India who did not have refrigerators. He came to
the US and got his Masters in Biomedical Engineering at Carnegie-Mellon
University. His startup dreams attracted him to Silicon Valley where
he got an MBA at Stanford University in 1980. Upon graduation he was
one of the three founders of Daisy Systems, which was the first significant
computer aided design system for electrical engineers. The company
went on to significant revenue, profits and an IPO, but Khosla, driven
by the frustration of having to design the computer hardware on which
the Daisy software needed to be built, started the standards based
Sun Microsystems in 1982 to build workstations for software developers.
At Sun he pioneered "open systems" and RISC processors. Sun
was funded by long time friend and board member John Doerr of Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers.
In 1986 he switched sides and joined Kleiner
Perkins where he was and continues to be a general partner of KPCB funds
through KP X. There, through the years, with other partners, he took
on Intel's monopoly with Nexgen/AMD (the only microprocessor to have
significant success against Intel, sold to AMD for 28% of AMD), incubated
the idea and business plan for Juniper to take on Cisco's dominance of
the router market, to formulate the very early advertising based search
strategy for Excite, and to transform the moribund telecommunications
business and its archaic SONET implementations with Cerent (sold to Cisco
for $7B), and many other ventures. He helped in creating value, having
fun, succeeding, failing (remember Dynabook?) and driving impact in partnership
with entrepreneur, and the partners at KPCB.
In 2004, Khosla, driven by the need for flexibility to accommodate four
teenage children and a desire to be more experimental, to fund sometimes
imprudent "science experiments", and to take on both "for
profit" and for "social impact" ventures, formed khoslaventures,
funded entirely with family funds. His goals remain the same - work and
learn from fun and knowledgeable entrepreneurs, build impactful companies
through the leverage of innovation, and spend time as a partnership making
a difference. He has a passion for nascent technologies that can have
a beneficial effect and economic impact on society. Vinod's greatest
passion is being a mentor to entrepreneurs, assisting entrepreneurs and
helping them build technology based businesses. Vinod assists or serves
on the boards of a number of the companies including EASIC (programmable
ASIC platform), Infinera (optical communications), Kovio (printed electronics),
Moka5 (internet PC), Spatial Photonics (Micromirror displays), Xsigo
(datacenter switch), among others.
Khosla is a charter member of TiE, a not-for-profit global network of
entrepreneurs and professionals founded in 1992 that now has more than
forty chapters in nine countries. He is also a Founding Board member
of the Indian School of Business. His current passion is Social Entrepreneurship
with a special emphasis on Microfinance as a poverty alleviation tool.
He is a supporter of many microfinance organizations in India and Africa.
He has been experimenting with global housing. Vinod is also passionate
about alternative energy, petroleum independence, and the environment.
He is currently Co-chairing a ballot initiative in California to reduce
the dependence on petroleum and to help foster clean energy technologies.
Nate Lewis
Dr. Nathan Lewis, George L. Argyros Professor of Chemistry, has been
on the faculty at the California Institute of Technology since 1988 and
has served as Professor since 1991. He has also served as the Principal
Investigator of the Beckman Institute Molecular Materials Resource Center
at Caltech since 1992. From 1981 to 1986, he was on the faculty at Stanford,
as an assistant professor from 1981 to 1985 and as a tenured Associate
Professor from 1986 to 1988. Dr. Lewis received his Ph.D in Chemistry
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Dr. Lewis has been an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, a Camille and Henry Dreyfus
Teacher-Scholar, and a Presidential Young Investigator. He received the
Fresenius Award in 1990, the ACS Award in Pure Chemistry in 1991, the
Orton Memorial Lecture award in 2003, and the Princeton Environmental
Award in 2003. He has published over 200 papers and has supervised approximately
50 graduate students and postdoctoral associates.
His research interests include light-induced electron transfer reactions,
both at surfaces and in transition metal complexes, surface chemistry
and photochemistry of semiconductor/liquid interfaces, novel uses of
conducting organic polymers and polymer/conductor composites, and development
of sensor arrays that use pattern recognition algorithms to identify
odorants, mimicking the mammalian olfaction process. |