Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas says the American dream is far from dead. On “The Joe Rogan Experience,” the Indian-origin founder called the US the only country where a risky idea gets taken seriously instead of dismissed. Raised lower-middle-class in India, Srinivas credits America’s risk-seeking culture for keeping it on top—arguing newcomers can still build companies that challenge even the biggest tech giants. Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas says the American dream is far from dead. On “The Joe Rogan Experience,” the Indian-origin founder called the US the only country where a risky idea gets taken seriously instead of dismissed. Raised lower-middle-class in India, Srinivas credits America’s risk-seeking culture for keeping it on top—arguing newcomers can still build companies that challenge even the biggest tech giants.
Trending
- PM Modi inaugurates Jodhpur airport’s new terminal building, launches modified UDAN scheme
- ‘Honoured to welcome my friend’: Australian PM Albanese ahead of PM Modi’s visit next week
- India clears air defence systems: How MR-SAM, V-SHORADS and Akash Tarang will secure the skies
- India allows four Chinese firms into critical power tenders; Congress attacks move
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding: NFL, NBA, NHL, MLB stars who attended the event
- ‘Planning wedding for 4 months’: Siya Goyal’s fiancé Ketan’s old video resurfaces
- Centre designates 23 Pakistan-based operatives linked to JeM, LeT as terrorists under UAPA – full list
- Tiny coffin beside Khamenei’s: 14-month-old granddaughter honoured at funeral