These people definitely have the money, and probably the brains. The question is: is that enough?<p>Because I doubt many of them are entrepreneurs by vocation. Otherwise they wouldn't have been G. employees in the first place, working in their own startups instead. So I guess many of them are angels because "that's what you do if you have money in the Valley".<p>So, how important is being an entrepreneur for the success of the company you are funding? Maybe they should've stayed employees? Or as long as you have the money and the brains, you're a good angel?<p>I guess we'll find out. If nothing else, it will be a great experiment - I would love to see the final statistics.