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New Delhi: Yasantha Rajakarunanayake is surprised Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man, remembers him three decades after they lost touch.
The Sri Lankan scientist, now based in the US, was Bezos’ classmate at Princeton University in the 1980s.
Speaking at The Economic Club of Washington, a non-profit that holds discussions on important issues of the day, Bezos described Yasantha as the “smartest guy at Princeton”.
It was Yasantha’s mastery of math that convinced him to abandon his dream of becoming a theoretical physicist, Bezos added in the 13 September talk.
Soon afterwards, the part of his speech about Yasantha went viral, and set the internet on the trail of the islander who, inadvertently, helped change the way the world shops.
Talking to ThePrint, the scientist said the surge of emails that followed Bezos’ speech first gave him the impression that he had been hacked.
“I think Jeff had done the interview on 13 September, and by 15, I was getting spam in my LinkedIn inbox,” said Yasantha. “Several people were asking me, ’are you Jeff Bezos’ Yoshanta?’ I thought someone had hacked my Linkedin, and was quite worried. They had misspelled my name as well.”
By 18 September, Yasantha, 55, had seen the video, and acknowledged it in a tweet.
“To hear him mention me by name, and include anecdotes about me on national (US) television as his Sri Lankan friend,” he told ThePrint, “It was a pleasant surprise.”
“It is not every day that the world’s richest guy calls you the smartest person he ever met in Princeton. I am thankful,” he added.
According to Yasantha, he and Bezos were at Princeton together between 1982 and 1985, and “shared some academic interests”.
In the video, Bezos animatedly described an anecdote from their days at the University, when he and a roommate failed to solve a math problem despite wracking their heads over it for hours. He was then an aspiring theoretical physicist.
When they couldn’t, both Bezos and his roommate screamed in unison “Yasantha”, because they knew the Sri Lankan would help them out. When they went to his room, according to Bezos, Yasantha stared at the problem for a while and then gave them the answer.
Taken aback by the promptness, Bezos asked him, “Did you just do that in your head?”
“No, that would be impossible,” Yasantha said, adding that he only knew the answer because he had solved a “very similar problem three years ago”.
“I was able to map this problem on to that problem, and the answer was immediately obvious,” he added.
“That was an important moment for me,” the Amazon Founder said, “because that was the very moment I realised I was never going to be a great theoretical physicist.”
Yasantha said he didn’t remember the incident as clearly as Bezos did, but added that it happened around 1984.
“I think it was in 1984 that he asked me for the solution to the math problem he mentioned in his video,” he told ThePrint. “It was a pivotal moment for him to decide to give up his initial dream of becoming a theoretical physicist. I don’t recall the incidents as vividly as he does, but it is quite true.”
The two haven’t kept in touch since 1985, but clearly share a mutual admiration.
“Jeff was an excellent student, and a very persistent, tenacious one,” said Yasantha, “That is unique to him.”
Yasantha described how students once dared each other to complete a computer science assignment in a single line of coding.
“Finally, I gave up and did this in 10 or so lines of code,” he added, “But I remember Jeff working through all night, in pursuit of the most compact solution, and turned in a two-line solution that was probably the shortest anyone could do.”
“It goes to prove that Jeff is tenacious, and will not give up like most of us would when presented with a challenge,” he said.