
In venture capital, there are three people who rule Silicon Valley:
John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins,
Michael Moritz of Sequoia Capital, and
Vinod Khosla of Khosla Ventures. All three will be speaking at
Disrupt. (There are still a few
tickets left). We've already mentioned
Doerr and
Moritz, and now we are pleased to announce that Khosla will be completing the triumvirate. Khosla, of course, was the first CEO of Sun Microsystems back in the 1980s before he joined John Doerr to embark on a storied career as a venture capitalist at Kleiner Perkins. At Kleiner, he had a string of huge wins, including Nexgen (which was acquired by AMD and formed the core of its ability to take on Intel), Juniper Networks, and Cerent (which was sold to Cisco for $7 billion). In 2004, he created
Khosla Ventures to invest his own money and began to dive deep into greentech, while still keeping his hand in infotech. Always known for being a
risk junkie and identifying
big opportunities early, he started to build one of the deepest portfolios of greentech investments in the Valley. Last year, he finally took outside money, raising
$1.1 billion for two new funds, including a seed fund.

Jill Arrington
Jill Wagner
Joanna Krupa
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