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  1. May 24, 2024 · At Stanford he met Andy Von Bechtolsheim and together they founded Granite Systems in 1996, which they sold a year later to Cisco Systems for $200 million. Stanford PhD students Larry Page and ...

  2. www.forbes.com › profile › david-cheritonDavid Cheriton - Forbes

    3 days ago · Cheriton and Andreas von Bechtolsheim (also now a billionaire) each invested $100,000 in Google when it was just getting started. The pair cofounded 3 companies: Arista Networks (IPO in 2014 ...

  3. computerhistory.org › profile › james-goslingJames Gosling - CHM

    May 24, 2024 · Gosling began his 26-year career at Sun when he was recruited by Sun cofounder Andy Bechtolsheim in 1984. An early project, done by Gosling and colleague David Rosenthal was the windowing system called SunDew, later renamed NeWS, the Network-extensible Windows System.

  4. May 8, 2024 · Built by Andy Bechtolsheim, a member of McNealy’s team, the computer was called the Stanford University Network workstation, or S.U.N. for short, and the company eventually became Sun Microsystems. Joy led Sun’s technical strategy, spearheading its open-systems philosophy.

  5. May 20, 2024 · Andy Bechtolsheim Biography Andy Bechtolsheim Biography. He was born on September 30th, 1955 in Finning Bavaria, West Germany. He was considered a child prodigy from the start. He started creating machines when he was just 11 years old. You might not know that, but when he was just 16 years old, he created an industrial controller for the company.

  6. May 19, 2024 · Andy Bechtolsheim Net Worth Andy Bechtolsheim is an American engineer and entrepreneur best known for co-founding Sun Microsystems and Arista Networks. Bechtolsheim has a net worth of $9.2 billion, according to Forbes as of 2023. He is ranked #316 on the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans and #1264 on the Forbes World's Billionaires list.

  7. www.computerhistory.org › profile › vinod-khoslaVinod Khosla - CHM

    May 23, 2024 · After graduating from Stanford University in 1979, Khosla along with his Stanford fellows Scott McNealy, Andy Bechtolsheim (another Carnegie Mellon University graduate school alumnus), and a UC Berkeley masters degree holder named Bill Joy founded Sun Microsystems. Khosla left Sun in 1985.