First of all, let me say that I feel really bad for everyone who is losing Dave Goldberg in their life. I feel bad that he will not get to see his two kids grow up. His death is very sad. I have not had a spouse die or a parent die and
Dave Goldberg's memorial service had no golden screens, no world-changing dreams or epic lines of code. About 1,700 people, most of whom, in the world's eyes, seem blessed beyond imagining, paused to contemplate fate and mortality. Many wept.
Hundreds of fortunate people packed into an auditorium on the sun-drenched campus of Stanford University Tuesday morning to celebrate the life of Dave Goldberg, a kind, humble, giving, intelligent, and fun-loving man they all agreed they were fortunate
David Goldberg, one of Silicon Valley's most high-profile, well-regarded and well-liked entrepreneurs, died suddenly last night of undetermined causes. News of his untimely death was posted on Facebook by his brother and
Silicon Valley lost one of the good ones earlier this month when longtime entrepreneur and SurveyMonkey CEO Dave Goldberg died suddenly while vacationing in Mexico. As Re/code Co-Executive Editor Kara Swisher put it: The accolades about Dave — no