Vinod Khosla

Vinod Khosla

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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, assiting 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), Skyblue (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.

Blog Entries by Vinod Khosla

Biofuels: Good or Bad?

Posted June 18, 2008 | 05:47 PM (EST)


To my surprise, recently I found myself the subject of an editorial by the Wall Street Journal which characterized me as a strong advocate of subsidies for food-based ethanol, and as a recipient of "federal dole" who ought to "take a vow of embarrassed silence." I have not advocated subsidies...

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Setting The Story Straight

Posted May 20, 2008 | 11:21 PM (EST)


To my surprise, this morning I found myself cited by the Wall Street Journal as a strong advocate of subsidies for food-based ethanol, and as a recipient of "federal dole" who ought to "take a vow of embarrassed silence." While I appreciate the Journal's foray into fiction writing (and...

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"Scheer Nonsense" -- The Damage Idealistic Environmentalists Can Do

Posted April 11, 2007 | 02:07 PM (EST)


Recently, I was on a panel with Dr. Herman Scheer, a member of the German parliament and the president of EUROSOLAR (The European Association for Renewable Energy) and a much honored "environmentalist". Suffice it to say that there was great commonality of goals but significant disagreement about "how". From my...

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President Bush, Please Declare a War on Oil!

Posted January 22, 2007 | 10:07 PM (EST)


To win the war on terror, we must first stop funding terrorists with our oil money. Let's instead use our money to fund a war on oil.

There is a lot of conventional wisdom that says we will have to stay dependent on oil. I ask all the experts...

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Part VII: Prop 87 and its Opponents' Deceptive Tactics

Posted November 5, 2006 | 12:42 AM (EST)


Sen. Feinstein Blasts Deceptive Big Oil Mailer

Over the past few days we've been telling you about a widely distributed private slate mailer labeled "Voter Information Guide for Democrats," boasting of "evaluations and recommendations" by the Democratic Party and others. The fine print notes that the slate mailer was prepared...

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Part VI: Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted November 2, 2006 | 11:42 PM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. We have an energy crisis, a climate crisis, and a terrorism crisis all of them tied to oil. We need to do something and do it now. If you agree with the discussion below (and a...

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Part V: Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted November 1, 2006 | 01:59 PM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. We have an energy crisis, a climate crisis, and a terrorism crisis all of them tied to oil. We need to do something and do it now. If you agree with the discussion below (and a...

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Part IV: Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted October 31, 2006 | 11:46 AM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. We have an energy crisis, a climate crisis, and a terrorism crisis all of them tied to oil. We need to do something and do it now. If you agree with the discussion below (and a...

Read Post

Part 3: Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted October 29, 2006 | 08:48 PM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. We have an energy crisis, a climate crisis, and a terrorism crisis all of them tied to oil. We need to do something and do it now. If you agree with the discussion below (and a...

Read Post

Part 2: Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted October 27, 2006 | 10:26 AM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. We have an energy crisis, a climate crisis, and a terrorism crisis all of them tied to oil. We need to do something and do it now. If you agree with the discussion below (and a...

Read Post

Don't Let the Big Oil Money Confuse You on Prop 87

Posted October 25, 2006 | 10:37 AM (EST)


In my opinion Prop 87 is good for California and good for the country. If you agree with the discussion below (and a series of subsequent posts) please email a link to this post to ten California voters and ask them to email to ten others.

As Tom Freidman...

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The Big Oil Companies Have Been Ripping Californians Off -- And Not Just at the Pump

Posted July 11, 2006 | 03:56 PM (EST)


You thought you were being ripped off at the pump. You are, but that is only half of the story -- the rip-off goes far beyond that. About a year ago I was approached by a group of scientists, environmentalists and fellow entrepreneurs who had joined together as Californians for...

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Big Oil's Big Profits, and the Big Lies They're Telling to Maintain Them

Posted June 30, 2006 | 09:27 PM (EST)


I've issued a challenge to any large organization or corporation that will commit to selling alternative fuels like ethanol. I will supply all the ethanol they need for the long term with a five- to seven-year fixed-price contract that, allowing for normal profit margins, will make it possible for them...

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