Who is divya narendra




















While at Harvard, he was involved in setting up a social networking website with fellow students Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss. Sensing the need for a more vetted online community was the inspiration behind HarvardConnection. So is Divya happy with it? Aditi Saxena. Rate Story. Font Size Abc Small. Abc Medium. Abc Large. ET Bureau. The young minds in the audience, probably aware of the ownership tussle between Narendra and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg , had one question for the year-old: Are you on Facebook now?

I'll have a thousand extra friends," Narendra said. In , we signed a settlement agreement with Facebook which has been highly publicised. One was Zuckerberg. ETPrime stories of the day Investing Bad bet or value buy?

Logistics There is a base, Gati hasn't destroyed itself. Subscribe to ETPrime. Browse Companies:. Cameron Winklevoss : That's right. Tyler Winklevoss : We can do that ourselves. I'm 6'5", , and there's two of me. Divya Narendra : You invented something in high school too, right? Mark Zuckerberg : An app for an MP3 player that recognizes your taste in music. Divya Narendra : Anybody try to buy it? Mark Zuckerberg : Microsoft. Divya Narendra : Wow. And even more surprising, the twins are also back in the news.

And the irony is not lost on me that the result of this research, and my new book, Bitcoin Billionaires , is really a reassessment of the image of the twins that I was partially responsible for creating.

My journey to Bitcoin Billionaires began more than 11 years ago, with a strange little email sent to my website in February Because of the success of my book Bringing Down the House , and the resulting movie, 21 , I was used to getting emails from college kids describing various schemes and adventures that usually ended in fortunes or jail time. But this particular email struck me as different. It was from a Harvard student named Will McMullen, and to paraphrase, it basically said: My best friend founded Facebook, and nobody has ever heard of him.

In , I was aware of Facebook. Curious, I arranged to meet the subject of the email the next night at Bar 10 at the Westin in the Back Bay. When Eduardo Saverin walked into Bar 10, he looked a little like a dog that had been kicked a few times.

From there, he proceeded to tell me the crazy story at the heart of what would eventually become The Social Network. A tale of two best friends who were far from social stars, more comfortable in front of their computer screens, and pathetically challenged when it came to matters of the opposite sex. Zuckerberg, his best friend, decided on a much more inventive strategy.

Enter: the Winklevoss twins. Their own programmer had left campus to work for Google, so they were in need of someone with the necessary computer skills to complete their nearly finished coding. In short, they needed a geek. After a lunch meeting at Kirkland House, Zuckerberg agreed to help—most likely more intrigued by the chance to hang out with two Olympic-level athletes with enviable social pedigrees than by their computer code—but then began to blow them off, mostly via email.

At the same time, Zuckerberg went back to his friend Saverin with a proposal: He had an idea for a website where people would put their own profiles up to connect with one another—and nobody would end up getting expelled from school. All Saverin needed to do was put up some money, and Zuckerberg would do the rest.



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