A child prodigy, an immigrant, and a serial entrepreneur— Amir Husain is using his empathy to build the future of computing.
Amir Husain’s Austin-based SparkCognition is working on the future of A.I., covering everything from the battlefield to power plants. A boy from Pakistan who fell in love with computers at age 4, Husain is now a founding member of the board of advisers for IBM Watson and a prolific inventor, with 27 U.S. patents awarded and many more pending.
I GREW UP IN LAHORE, Pakistan, where my father was a businessman and an investor, and my mother was an educator. When I was 4 years old, I had my first experience with a computer: a Commodore 64. It blew my mind that you could control what showed up on the screen. Afterward, I went to my room, grabbed some toys, disassembled them, added cardboard, and made a contraption that I called a computer. My mom knew then that I was hooked.
By the time I was in eighth grade, I was bored at school. I convinced the principal and my father that I was ready to move on. So I left school and wrote software, making a few hundred dollars selling it locally.I started college at age 15 and got my first bachelor’s degree in computer science from the Punjab Institute of Computer Science in Lahore at 17. I’d been looking at laboratories all over the world, and there was one in Austin called Distributed Multimedia Computing Laboratory [DMCL] that was working on next-generation technologies for the web. That’s where I wanted to work.
Bu hikaye Fortune dergisinin March 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Fortune dergisinin March 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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