Bezos graduated from Princeton with Bachelor of Science degrees in electrical engineering and computer science with a 4.2 grade point average. But that skyrocketing rise probably would not have been possible had Bezos decided to pursue a career in pure sciences. So what made Bezos realise he was not exactly the guy who would spend nights working to solve an equation?
The Amazon CEO himself gave the answer at The Economic Club of Washington. He said that all credit goes to his friend from Princeton, a Sri Lankan by the name of Yasantha, who he claimed was the smartest person in Princeton University at the time. You can watch this video where Bezos reveals how the epiphany that he would never make a good theoretical physicist dawned on him when Yasantha cracked a maths problem.
Jeff recalled this Sri Lankan man who had the longest last name and how he solved a partial differential equation in no time. He recalled how “we showed Yoshantha the math equation and he stares at it and said cosine the answer.” It was then that the CEO of Amazon realized he cannot be a great theoretical physicist. He also expressed how some moments can change your life.