Many of the tech world's top executives filled a 1,700-seat auditorium at Stanford University to commemorate David Goldberg, chief executive of SurveyMonkey. He died at age 47 on Friday, after a treadmill accident during a vacation in Mexico.
"We had 11 truly joyful years of the deepest love, happiest marriage, and truest partnership that I could imagine," Sandberg posted on Facebook. "He gave me the experience of being deeply understood, truly supported and completely and utterly loved - and I will carry that with me always." She also said he was her "rock."
"I met Dave nearly 20 years ago when I first moved to LA. He became my best friend. He showed me the internet for the first time, planned fun outings, took me to temple for the Jewish holidays, introduced me to much cooler music than I had ever heard," she said. "Dave was my rock."
Her post appeared hours after the ceremony, a tribute to the low-key executive, whose marriage to Sandberg added to his fame from building a company valued at $2 billion.
Speakers described Goldberg's self-deprecation, modesty and selflessness, and the event, closed to the media, included several nods to his passions.
On their way out, guests were offered Minnesota Vikings baseball caps as a reminder of the Minneapolis-born Goldb-erg's lighthearted nature and love of sports, according to a person who attended the service and who declined to be identified. Also on hand were playing cards stamped with his initials, and poker chips. During the ceremony, U2's Bono sang One, the Irish rock band's anthem to love and support.
Many guests entered through side and back doors after driving into a cordoned-off area behind the hall. Some, such as Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Meg Whitman, walked up the steps and through the main entrance.
Many began offering personal tributes to Goldberg on social media on Saturday, including Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg. Sandberg, however, remained silent until Tuesday morning, when she responded to a public note by President Barack Obama. "David Goldberg embodied the definition of a real leader - someone who was always looking for ways to empower others," the US President wrote in a Facebook message signed B.O., meaning he personally wrote it. "We're heartbroken by him leaving us far too soon - but we celebrate a remarkable legacy."
Sandberg in turn took to Facebook, thanking Obama for his friendship. "Dave Goldberg admired you for your leadership, passion, and your deep love of sports," she wrote. She also changed her Facebook cover photo on Tuesday morning to a picture of her dancing with Goldberg at their wedding in 2004.
Goldberg built SurveyMonkey into a poll-taking juggernaut after joining the company in 2009.
He previously worked for venture firm Benchmark, after founding Launch Media and selling it to Yahoo in 2001.
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