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
- US summer heat: 5 cooling tricks people around world have used for generations
- Year after calling India ‘dead economy’, Trump says country ‘doing very well at 7-8%’
- America turns 250 on July 4: New Jersey family business is older than the US, still family-run
- ‘Wedding that would never happen’: Siya Goyal’s ‘Snapchat message’ to friend goes viral
- Maharashtra deputy CM Eknath Shinde hospitalised due to fever & exhaustion
- ‘Why is everyone pointing the gun at me?’: Ex-India selector defends Sanju Samson
- ‘Peddi’ OTT release: When and where to watch Ram Charan, Janhvi Kapoor’s film
- PM Modi inaugurates Jodhpur airport’s new terminal building, launches modified UDAN scheme