User:Heema Patel/sandbox

EARLY LIFE: Evan Luthra was born on 21st january 1995 in new delhi and raised up in India. His mother and father both are in fashion industry and now his younger brother is going to join them as well once he is done with his study in fashion. Evan’s childhood was pretty much same as any other child’s childhood- playing games going schools, surfing web and so on. He has seen his father starting and failing in business but never losing hope and at last being successful. He has got his entrepreneur genes from his father. In his childhood his parents kept his exposed and updated with the internet which lead to increasing his interest in technology. Once when he was 12, his parents gave him access to the best resources when it came to the internet. Once he had the World Wide Web in his hands, he found millions of ways to make money that let him spoil himself. If he wanted something, he would usually help someone else get rich online and take his cut. This proved that he was always having ideas to make for people and himself. When he was 12, his father started a call center business which was essentially the customer support back office for multiple companies. After three months into the business and over a million dollars invested, his father realized the CEO he had hired took the money and ran. The business failed shortly after that. Where others saw failure, he saw opportunity. Most would say this was the turning point in his life. HE was only 12. How can a 12-year-old have a “turning point”? Very simply, he was born and bred to be an entrepreneur. There were 200 new HPs lying around collecting dust. As the call center was connected to the same building as his parents’ fashion business, he used to go to his dad’s office every day to work with those computers. He was a 12-year-old kid with access to 200 computers and the ability to do whatever he wished with them! Imagine the possibilities!

He basically started opening up all those computers and playing around with the processors. He learned how computers work and, inevitably, what not to do with them. He ended up destroying about 50 computers trying to make master computers. He quickly learned networking, hardware systems, software, etc. All the while, he was sharing his experiences with an online forum called Pulse. had a fan base of well over 100,000 people.