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The teenagers who won math olympiads most adults couldn't qualify for are now building startups worth billions. Several EWOR Fellows competed in olympiad competitions before they ever thought about startups – representing their countries and taking home gold. They just called it an extracurricular. At 17, Prajit beat 4M students to win India's National Science Olympiad Gold. By 20, he had built a diagnostic device impacting 600M people. By 23, he had published 9+ papers at NeurIPS and MICCAI. He's now building the world’s first planetary-scale simulation engine at EWOR. For his 14th birthday, Saman's parents gave him a telescope. He mounted it on the roof, rigged a remote from his beat-up PC, and automated high-resolution photos of Mars and Saturn from his bedroom. Years later, he won the National Juniors Gold in the astrophysics olympiad. He's now building Binome at EWOR, an always-on AI COO for founders and SMEs. At 10, Erika competed in her first maths olympiad. She'd enter 7 competitions in total. Her sharpest memory from every one: being the only girl in the room. She's now building auryx at EWOR with two female co-founders, turning regular earbuds into continuous health monitors. At 16, Bragadeesh was among 0.1% candidates qualifying for the math olympiad in India. By 23, he was building chips and securing patents in AI and Chip Design. After refusing an offer from Google's TPU team, he is now building Tattvam AI, the intelligence layer for chip design. Each of these founders already knew how to sit with a problem long after most people would have moved on. That is exactly the kind of founder we look for at EWOR. If any of this sounds familiar, you already know what to do: https://lnkd.in/ek9ZGhVC #EWOR #startups #entrepreneurship #founders #founderfellowship

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