The 20-Year-Old Indian Prodigy Who Gave AI a Supermemory

Supermemory has attracted investments from Google AI chief Jeff Dean, Cloudflare CTO Dane Knecht and DeepMind’s Logan Kilpatrick, among others.
Image by Nalini Nirad
In Silicon Valley, headlines are dominated by the same few names—OpenAI, Anthropic and Google—raising billions of dollars and building products that unsettle startups trying to build solutions on top of them. For a young founder, finding a moat in the AI space feels extremely difficult. For a solo founder, it’s near unthinkable.  Yet, Dhravya Shah from Mumbai was just shy of 20 when he raised $3 million for his solo startup, Supermemory. At an age when most students are still figuring out internships or college majors, Shah has built a company valued at $40 million, attracting investments from Google AI chief Jeff Dean, Cloudflare CTO Dane Knecht and DeepMind’s Logan Kilpatrick, among other top Silicon Valley names.  He’s done it without a co-founder. Just a lapto
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Mohit Pandey
Mohit writes about AI in simple, explainable, and often funny words. He's especially passionate about chatting with those building AI for Bharat, with the occasional detour into AGI.
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