Mike Farmwald

Paul Michael "Mike" Farmwald[1] is a successful serial entrepreneur working in the Silicon Valley high-tech industry.

Mike Farmwald is known for his combination of computer engineering skill and market vision. Mike, who holds a doctorate in Computer Science from Stanford University where he was a Hertz Foundation Fellow, has founded six companies to date, five of which were financed in part by Benchmark Capital, where he is a Venture Partner.

He has founded these companies:

Mike is probably best known for cofounding Rambus (NASDAQ: RMBS), a developer of high-bandwidth interfaces for memories and other chips. After founding the company in 1990, Mike served as Vice President and Chief Scientist, overseeing the development of several key innovations, including the 1992 introduction of the world's first 4 Mbit RDRAM.

Mike also invests directly in startups through Skymoon Ventures. His recent investments include technology companies incubated at Skymoon R&D (Dash, whose navigation systems bring internet to the car, and Finesse Solutions, a measurement and control provider to the biotechnology industry) as well as companies that bring technology to traditional business (Remote Lands, a luxury bespoke Asian travel outfitter started by entrepreneur Catherine Heald and ICE, a fitness concept company started by award-winning cheerleading coach Darlene Fanning).

He has also publicly criticized and shorted the stock of technology companies he believes are defrauding investors by misrepresenting their technology. In 2005 he shorted ParkerVision, a RF semiconductor IP company, and created a website detailing their problems with the company.[2] [3]

References

  1. "Tree of Students of Prof. Forest Baskett, for the Stanford Computer History Exhibits". Stanford University InfoLab. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  2. "The Strange Case of ParkerVision". 2007-12-03.
  3. "Launch of updated pvnotes.com website". 2007-12-17.

External links