Sundar Pichai | |
---|---|
Real Name | Sundar Pichai |
Gender | Male |
Birth Date | June 1971 |
Age | 52 years |
Birth Place | Pichai Sundararajan |
Nationality | indian |
Net Worth (approx.) | $390 million |
Who is Sundar Pichai?
July 1972. Birth and parents. Pichia Sandararrajin was born to Reganathha Pichai and Lakshmi in Madurae Tail Nau. India. His father was an electrical engineer at the British conglomerate GEC and managed a factory that made electrical components. His mother was a stenographer before having children. January 1980. Background and family. Pichai grew up in a two-room apartment in Asshhok Nagar. Chennai and hailes from a middle class to mill family. He had a humble Hindu upbringing and has one brother. March 1985. Childhood. Sundar was an active and bright student. He excelled academically at his school Padma Shagari Bala Bhavan. He was a sports enthusiast and was the captain of his school cricket team. He was an avid fan of football and cricket. May 1993. Education. He earned a seat in the Indian Institute of Technology at KAUR, one of the most prestigious engineering institutions in India and did his beech and metallurgical engineering. April 1994. India to America. Pacha got a scholarship to study Material Science in Semiconductor Physics at Stanford University for MS. His father drained Oneyes Savings to cover pacha’s traveling and additional expenses.
April 1998. Career over academics. He initially planned to pursue a phd from Stanford and embark on an academic career. However, he dropped out in Joint Applied Materials, a Silicon Valley semiconductor maker, as an engineer and product manager.
May 2 thousand and two navigating paths. After completing his MBA from Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, he was appointed as a management consultant at mckinsey and Company. He worked there for a short span of two years. April 2 thousand and four hello. Google. Pacha joined Google. Initially, he worked on google’s search toolbar as a part of a small team. The toolbar gave users of Internet Explorer and Firefox easy access to Google Search.
January 2 thousand and five marriage. Pacha met his classmate Anjali at IIT Karaper and they fell in love with each other during their college days. They got married after he had a stable life and had two children, a girl and a boy named Kavi and Kian.
September 2 thousand and eight. Google Chrome PCHA convinced the co-founders of Google. Larry Page and Sergi Bryn, to launch google’s own browser. Pacha played a pivotal role in the ultimate launch of the browser. Google Chrome December 2 thousand and eight rising the latter. Pacha was promoted to Vice President of Product Development. In this position, he started appearing more often at Google presentations and continued rising the ranks in Google. By 2012, he had become the Senior Vice President of Chrome and Apps. May 2012, world’s Best Browser. Pacha became an internationally known figure following the phenomenal success of Chrome and became the number one browser in the world, surpassing Internet Explorer and Firefox. Chrome also paved the way for a series of other important products like Chrome OS. Chromebooks and Chrome Cast. March 2013, managing Android. Andy Rubin, the creator of Android, left to work on a different project. Larry Page then made Pechai in charge of Android as well. His influence continued to increase and he was made the product chief in October 2014.
October 2015. Alphabet and Google CEO. Pacha stepped into the new position as Google CEO after the formation of Alphabet Inc. The new holding company for the Google Company family. He later took up the responsibility of Alphabet Two as CEO in 2019.
February 2016 accumulating wealth. He was awarded 200 and 73300 and 28 shares of google’s holding company Alphabet, which led to a rise in his net worth. His current net worth is estimated to be 1.3 billion dollars. April 2016. Getting recognized. Pacha was included in Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in 2016 and 2020. He is one of the highest paid ceos in the world and is most sought after. Google offered him a whopping 50 million dollars to remain in the leadership when sought by competitors.
August 2017 Right a Wrong PCHA drew publicity for firing a Google employee who criticized the company’s diversity policies and imparted baseless and unequal moral values. Pacha said to Google employees To suggest a group of our colleagues have traits that make them less biologically suited to. That work is offensive and not okay.
December 2018 US Congress testimony. Sundar testified before the US House Judiciary Committee on issues such as political bias on google’s platforms and its privacy practices. He denied the voiding of privacy laws and political bias.
December 2020 Making World Digital. Pacha is focused on delivering the technologies to those who are unaided at Singapore Fintech Festival. He shares our goal for the post-covid world is to ensure the benefits of technology can be shared as widely and equitably as possible. May 2020 What the Future Holds. Pacha is the leader of one of the biggest companies in the world and is steering it towards growth in the world’s development. Currently, the company’s goal is to make technology accessible and useful to everyone. I grew up without much access to technology. We didn’t get our first telephone till I was ten. I didn’t have regular access to a computer until I came to America for graduate school.
Under television when we finally got one, only had one channel, so imagine how awestruck I am today to be speaking to you on a platform that has millions of channels. By contrast, you grew up with computers of all shapes and sizes, the ability to ask a computer anything anywhere. The very thing I’ve spent my last decade working on is not amazing to you. That’s okay. It doesn’t make me feel bad. It makes me hopeful there are probably things about technology that frustrate you and make you impatient. Don’t lose the impatience. He’ll create the next technology revolution and enable you to build things my generation could never dream of.
You may be just as frustrated by My generation’s approach to climate change or education. Be impatient, it’ll create the progress. The world needs.