Many children these days are born with special talents. There is no harm in calling some of those children wonder boys. And Starlink owner Elon Musk was surprised by the talent of such a child.
And he was so impressed that he gave the 14-year-old a job at Space X. The teenager who has been talked about for so long is Kairan Quazi, currently the youngest Space X engineer. Kieron himself told everyone by sharing this on his LinkedIn account and Instagram.
The LA Times reported that Kazi began studying computer science and engineering at the age of 11 and is set to graduate from Santa Clara University this month. Note that Kazi has to go through a tough yet fun interview process to land a job at SpaceX. It is now known that the teenager will help fulfill SpaceX's goal of sending humans to Mars.
Working
as an engineer in Starlink
Kazi wrote on LinkedIn that he is going to be a part of the best company on the planet and will soon be joining the Starlink engineering team as a software engineer. He also writes, "This is a company that does not see age as a barrier, but respects its intelligence."
According to reports, Kazee, who lives in Redmond, Washington, may relocate to Pleasanton, California with his mother to work at SpaceX. A few weeks ago, she said in an Instagram post that she was preparing for her job interview at SpaceX. And now he posted a picture of the job acceptance letter to share the success with his followers.
Kazi
was intelligent from childhood
According to the LA Times report, Kazi was a brilliant student since childhood. Want to know about every new thing. He started talking at the age of two. At a young age he acquired knowledge in many subjects. By the time he was in third grade, he would do his homework effortlessly. Seeing that talent, his parents enrolled him in community college, and now he's about to start his career as the youngest SpaceX engineer.
By the way, play games related to working history in free time. He also enjoys reading science fiction books by popular author Philip K. Dick. Also, he follows journalist Michael Lewis, who writes about the financial crisis and behavioral finance.