There are two people in the world who really inspire me to the core. Both are based in California , both are in there twenties, both were millionaires by the age of 20, both are masters of the online world; both made money sitting on the comp. But there is one striking difference, one of them dropped out of high school at the age of sixteen, the other attended one of the best colleges in the world. Yet I am immensely inspired and influenced by both.
GURBAKSH CHAHAL
Chahal, (born July 17, 1982 ) is an Indian American self-made entrepreneur, author, TV personality, and motivational speaker. By the age of 25, he founded two advertising companies worth $340 million.
When he was four, his family settled in For the Chahal family, as for many immigrants, education was paramount, but G left high school at sixteen to form Click Agents, an Internet advertising company, which he sold two years later for $40 million.
"Everything starts with a dream, a particle of our imagination that teases us of what the future could be like, as long as we fight for it"-Gurbaksh Chahal
MARK ZUCKERBERG

He founded Facebook in his college dorm room seven years ago.
Zuckerberg may seem like an over-sharer in the age of over-sharing. But that’s kind of the point.. In the bio section of his facebook page, Zuckerberg writes simply, “I’m trying to make the world a more open place.”
The world, it seems, is responding. The site is now the biggest social network in countries ranging from Indonesia to Colombia . Today, at least one out of every fourteen people in the world has a Facebook account. Zuckerberg, meanwhile, is becoming the boy king of Silicon Valley .
Zuckerberg––or Zuck, as he is known to nearly everyone of his acquaintance––is pale and of medium build, with short, curly brown hair and blue eyes. He’s only around five feet eight, but he seems taller, because he stands with his chest out and his back straight, as if held up by a string. His standard attire is a gray T-shirt, bluejeans, and sneakers. The typical complaint about Zuckerberg is that he’s “a robot.” He’s been overprogrammed.
Asked if he’s the same person in front of a crowd as he is with friends, Zuckerberg responded, “Yeah, same awkward person.”"When you give everyone a voice and give people power, the system usually ends up in a really good place. So, what we view our role as, is giving people that power."
p.s.- u can follow me on twitter..http://twitter.com/#!/manny_singh14
or add me on facebook http://www.facebook.com/manan.hora
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