The Good Tech Companies - From Bangladesh to Texas: Shakib and the Power of Hackathons
Episode Date: May 31, 2024This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/from-bangladesh-to-texas-shakib-and-the-power-of-hackathons. Overcoming illness and adversit...y, Mostofa Adib Shakib rose from a bedridden teen to a tech innovator, creating educational and tech opportunities for thousands. Check more stories related to startups at: https://hackernoon.com/c/startups. You can also check exclusive content about #entrepreneurship, #hackathon, #tech-innovators, #tech-educations, #ai-startups, #tech-entrepreneurs, #career-journey, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @jonstojanmedia. Learn more about this writer by checking @jonstojanmedia's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. At 15, Mostofa Adib Shakib invested $5 on his first eCommerce venture, selling videogame cosmetics. He made over $30,000 on that combined with scholarships was enough to take him from Bangladesh to the US. Shakib earned two bachelor degrees and two minors, completed six software engineering internships, taught students programming for more than three years, and created new opportunities.
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From Bangladesh to Texas.
Shakib and the Power of Hackathons.
By John Stoyan Media.
There are plenty of entrepreneurs who can talk about turning adversity into opportunity.
Still, they're usually just talking about, failing up,
or rolling a bad investment into a lucky investment later.
What they aren't talking about is spaying their way through college
while bedridden with illness, unless it is Mustafa Adib Shakib who's saying it. If it's Shakib,
that's precisely what Hemiens. At 15, stuck in bed for months and missing his 11th grade exams,
Shakib invested $5 on his first e-commerce venture, Kurt's Steam Store, selling video
game cosmetics. He made over $30,000 on that,
and the scholarships were enough to take him from Bangladesh to the US.
At Texas Tech University, Adeeb earned two bachelor's degrees and two minors,
completed six software engineering internships, taught students programming for more than three
years, and created new opportunities for students interested in computer science,
which is something Mostofa Ade Shaqib specializes in. Creating Opportunity and Change. University Hackathons. I started
university without any programming experience and quickly learned that companies at our job fair
don't hire international students, says Shaqib, who made it his business to start excelling at
hackathons. He received the Best Web Design Award at a Rice University hackathon
and outright won at Princeton University, then started Texas Tech University's first
hackathon-focused student organization. He helped his fellow students gain skills and
attend competitions there, which inspired the university to host its own hackathon in six years.
These achievements led Raider Hacks to become the second-best new student organization of the year.
By the time he graduated, Shakib's foreign student status didn't stop job offers from Snapchat,
Twitter, and Amazon. At Snapchat, he joined the platform and performance team,
where he could contribute to projects that would impact millions of users.
During this time, Shakib also became interested in DeFi tech and co-founded a blockchain startup
that participated in the NSFI Corps program, won a regional nomination, and received invitations
to prestigious events like the South by Southwest, South by Southwest, conference alongside grants
from Theis Government. New educational solutions. Coding Sheikbi Bangladesh. These experiences
positioned Shakib well to begin solving the problems he once overcame as a B. Bangladesh. These experiences positioned Shaqib well to begin solving the
problems he once overcame as a youth in Bangladesh. During a trip home, he says,
I noticed that many people were complaining about how directionless they were and how the
lack of high-quality CS educational resources limited their ability to upskill themselves.
Not everyone could do what Shaqib had once done, earning tens of thousands to travel to a foreign country for education. So, in April 2023, Shakib began coding Sheik B Bangladesh, with the vision to provide
guidance, insides, and high-quality CS educational resources in Bangla, as well as to create a much
needed hackathon culture in Bangladesh. A year later, the initiative grew to over 50,000 followers,
and the first Bangladesh-wide
hackathon was set to be judged by industry experts from major tech companies like Apple,
Microsoft, etc. The transformational power of sharing new ideas. Aside from having spoken
at Bangladeshi universities, Shakib has also been a judge and mentor at a Stanford University
hackathon. He has also been named an AI 2030 Global Fellow
and has become a venture investor in Gangles, a major American venture capital firm with over
$700 million in assets under management. He is also the founder of Variant Technologies,
the holding company behind Coding Sheik B. Bangladesh, an AI media tech startup called
Viral Vision AI, and has been selected to become a mentor
for Techstars Global, the top global startup accelerator in the world.
That's a lot for one person to do, but Shaqib is making the most of the opportunities he's
created for himself, using them to create new opportunities and bring new visions to life.
By situating himself at the intersection of business and technology, Shaqib wants to find
solutions and helm a startup that is making life easier and better for millions of people. Part of this means
helping to transform Bangladesh into a tech hub and creating AI-powered software solutions.
There's a lot of work to be done, but Mostafa Adib Shakib is thriving, and he can't wait to
share his great ideas with the world. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by Artificial Intelligence.
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