14. Kamakshi Sivaramakrishnan - Business woman
Born in a typical South
Indian family in Bombay Sion, Kamakshi Sivaramakrishnan is a woman who has
carved out a unique identity in the almost entirely male-dominated IT industry.
After graduating from Bombay with an engineering degree, Kamakshi pursued her
higher education at Stanford University in the United States, and her aim was to become an expert computer programmer,
which is the dream of all our youth today. But it is fair to say she was more than just a programmer and have built a
world of her own. The special program she developed for her Ph.D. at Stanford
is being used for a meticulous experiment and study on the American space
agency NASA's probe to Pluto, the most distant planet in the solar system. With
this, she has become a force to be reckoned with in information technology.
In her own words, she was not ready to become a programmer like others.
It was her passion to walk the path no
one else walked. What she is doing now is not what she studied in Bombay,
researched at Stanford or what Google and Facebook did. In an interview,
someone asked her, "Why are you doing this?" Kamakshi said, "No
one told me not to do this!" "
The truth is that the
field in which Kamakshi worked was generally male-dominated. But she was not interested in being one among the crowd in
any company with a big salary. That's why she joined a start-up company called
AdMob after her higher studies. They were able to experiment with many new
programming methods in a company that was generally full of beginners. The
topic they chose was to develop a machine learning stack rather than normal
programming. She soon became the leader of the group. The problem was how to
make online advertising attractive to individuals. Kamakshi was a pioneer in
this. But instead of their natural method, Kamakshi tried some more innovative
methods. What they tried was an innovative approach that the giants of
information technology, Google and Apple, did not use. Their lack of courage to
try new methods, even if they failed at first, also led to the company's
success. "When I joined AdMob, Kamakshi was the only woman there.
Kamakshi Ph.D. It was an
unexpected success that the research was used in the New Horizon spacecraft to
explore Pluto. Seven experiments were intended to be carried out on the
spacecraft sent to the outermost planet of the solar system. One of them was
called REX. It was an acronym for Radio Science Experiment. The goal was to
study the planet's surface by sending a radio signal from the spacecraft to
Pluto and measuring the diffraction of the signal on Pluto's surface. Kamakshi
made a chip for that. What was needed was to analyze the signal received from a
planet three billion miles away. The chip should have used as little electrical
power as possible to travel such long distances. They really took it as a
challenge. They developed an algorithm for that. In this, they used a design
and chip for energy management that effectively transmitted information from
that distant planet to Earth.
The ability to undertake
such unusual challenges helped them develop a technology of their own. The
company they founded for that was called Drawbridge. The company quickly grew
to become one of the most important women-owned companies in America. Based in
San Mateo, California, the company was developed using artificial intelligence
to study how advertising affects people. This is the type of technology that
will be used in the Internet of the future. Advertisements are made using the
maximum amount of data (Big data) obtained from customers. The fact that this
company has grown enviably (23,000 percent) in the last three years alone shows
its growth. In 2014, the annual revenue of this techie company was more than 33
million dollars. The mastermind of that success was Kamakshi herself, who was
an extraordinary genius. The success in business was due to her extraordinary confidence and extraordinary
ability to break new ground and move forward. In her own words, “The success of a business depends
on the millions of small things involved. Thousands look at me with critical
eyes every moment as a woman. It was never new to me. I've never had any qualms
walking into an all-male business meeting alone or pitching my ideas to them.
There will be failures, of course. But if you learn from it and move forward,
success is certain if not today or tomorrow.”
Reference
https://yourstory.com/2015/10/kamakshi-sivaramakrishnan
http://mediawiki.feverous.co.uk/index.php/Drawbridge_(company)

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