Salesforce, NASA and Noble Laureates
So Jimmy and I headed over to an event organized by Marc Benioff the
CEO of Salesforce.com to launch his book on social entrepreneurship
and to honor some of people featured in the book such as Peter
Gabriel, Michael Dell and Alan Hassenfeld, CEO of Hasbro. It was a
delight to see Peter and Alan getting well deserved respect. As I was
leaving for dinner, for the first time, ran into Gavin Newsom who
promised to come by our new office to officially "bless" it. The
mayor, as always, was in great form.
On the way to dinner I stopped at the Accel Partners party...they
always have the best wine, champagne and food...in a very beautiful
modern art museum. But this year unlike the last few years they did
not do it with Google who was having their own party later on that
evening. Accel was a much smaller event as a result. And more on
Google later.
Then it was on to a Davos dinner which for me was a real treat. The
main guest, who was at my table, was Mike Griffin, the Director of
NASA. The other guests were the Chief Scientifc Advisor to the Prime
Minister of Japan and an old friend Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer
Royal of Britain. Griffin was astonishing, candid, insightful,
imaginative, open minded, (a bit arrogant), though willing to listen,
and willing to admit that he got something wrong. And not at all like
a typical bureaucrat. His vision is one of a space faring civilization
and he doesn't mean the US, he means humankind. He loves the idea of
space based solar power, Stewart will be pleased to hear. He has
funded some of the best innovative rocket technology like Elon Musk's
Space X. So for me this was a really exciting evening.
As it happens sitting next to me was another space buff, Abdullatif
Al-Othman, the CFO of Saudi Aramco, someone I have worked with before.
He was an excited fan too, but he also had very kind words about the
impact we have had on Aramco and invited us back.
Then things got weird...
So after dinner I decided to go the Google party which was beginning
at 10:30. After putting on my warm clothes to march back up the frozen
hill to the Steignberger, I had not gotten twenty feet from the front
door of the hotel when I was hijacked by HH Sheik Salman Al Kalifah,
the Chairman of Bharain oil whom I've know for some time and mainly
see here at Davos. He leaned in close and whispered urgently to
me..."Shimone Peres is about to speak here at your hotel and I need to
listen to him, but I can't walk in there alone. If any of the Arab
press see me I am in deep trouble, but I have to be there. Please take
me in there so I can be anonymous." So what could I do but turn around
and take him in. The event was a night cap with several Nobel
laureates including Joe Stiglitz, Ron Engle and Berkeley' Steve Chu
and soon to arrive Shimone Peres. But Peres got trapped at the Accel
party and never showed. The speakers were great though. When Larry
Summers who was interviewing them asked Joe Stiglitz "what is the one
fallacy in the air around Davos that would undermine some common
beliefs?" Joe, replied, "Only one?" And then went on to attack the
discussion on the need for a new round of trade agreements. He argued
that no deal is better than a bad deal. And the last round was a bad
deal." That would indeed be a very controversial position around
Davos. At the end of the session the sheik salvaged his evening when I
introduced him to Joe Stiglitz and he got to ask Joe about the future
of oil and he replied..."biofuels!" And as it happened I had just
introduced the sheik to Jay Kiesling, one of the leaders in synthetic
biology whose new start up company will soon be focusing on bacteria
to produce biofuels. The sheik immediately asked, can I invest as this
is obviously the future. The sheik ended the evening by asking if we
could help him deal with the security issues facing Bahrain. By then
it was too late to head up the hill. So for me, even if I missed the
Google party, perhaps something of value will flow from this, the
Noble event was really interesting anyway and I was able to help an
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