Company
| Bob Metcalfe |
Bob had three other careers in technological innovation before becoming a venture capitalist: While an engineer-scientist (1965-1979), Bob helped pioneer the Internet. In 1973, at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, he invented Ethernet, the local-area networking (LAN) standard on which he shares four patents. Now, 35 years later, about 350 million new Ethernet ports are installed each year. While an entrepreneur-executive (1979-1990), Bob founded 3Com Corporation, the billion-dollar networking company where at various times he was Chairman, CEO, division general manager, and vice president of engineering, sales, and marketing. While a publisher-pundit (1990-2000), Bob was CEO of IDG's InfoWorld Publishing Company (1992-1995). For eight years, he opined about the Internet in an InfoWorld column read weekly by half a million information technologists. He pontificated at conferences, on radio and television, hosted his own weekly webcast, and produced events including ACM97, ACM1, Agenda, Pop!Tech, and Vortex. Bob's books include Packet Communication, Internet Collapses, and Beyond Calculation, all still available down the long tail at Amazon.com. Boards: Bob serves on the boards of Polaris-backed start-ups including 1366 Technologies, Ember, GreenFuel, Infinite Power Solutions, Mintera, SiCortex, and SiOnyx. Bob is also a director-trustee-advisor to Avistar, St. Mark's School, USC Stevens Institute, MIT, and MIT's Technology Review Magazine, McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and Energy Initiative. Education: |
