This Article is From Nov 10, 2014

Indian-Origin Teenager Gets Intel Funding For Braille Printer

Indian-Origin Teenager Gets Intel Funding For Braille Printer
Houston: A 13-year-old Indian-origin boy has received a huge investment from Intel for developing a
low-cost printer for the blind, making him the youngest tech entrepreneur funded by a venture capital firm.

Shubham Banerjee, CEO of the Braille printer maker Braigo Labs, had closed an early round funding with Intel Capital, the company's venture capital arm, last month to develop a prototype of low-cost Braille printer.

Till last year, California-based Shubham had no idea what Braille was and it was only when he came across a fundraising flyer for the visually impaired that he started to wonder how blind people read.

So, like any other seventh grader would do, he asked his parents. His father's response: "Go Google it".

While googling, Shubham discovered the high cost of Braille printers, which usually cost more than USD 2,000.

"When I found out the cost of a Braille printer, I was shocked," Shubham said in a recent media report. "I just wanted to help the visually impaired. I had a Lego Robotics kit, so I asked, 'Why not just try that?"

Built out of Lego's Mindstorms EV3blocks and little pieces from Home Depot Braigo Lab's printer turned out to function quite well. It earned Shubham a lot of recognition too, including 'The Tech Awards' 2014 and an invitation to the White House Maker Faire, an event that awards student entrepreneurs and innovators.

Shubham believes it could solve a decades-long problem that's been holding back so many visually impaired people around the world -- the high cost of Braille printers.

Shubham says his printer could significantly cut down the price of Braille printers to less than USD 500. According to his website, there are 285 million visually impaired people worldwide, and 90 per cent of them live in developing countries.

It's not easy to drop a couple grand on a printer, even by a developed country's standards.
Impressed by his product and vision, Intel came calling last September and told him it would invest in his company.

And last week, the investment was made official at the Intel Capital Global Summit, when Braigo Labs was mentioned as one of the 16 tech startups Intel's investing in this year.

The exact amount of the investment was not disclosed, it's reported to be a few hundred thousand dollars, making Shubham the youngest tech entrepreneur ever funded by a
venture capital firm.

With Intel's funding, Braigo Labs plans to build a new prototype that resembles a regular printer, and bring it to market by next year.

Shubham says he has no plans to expand into other product categories at this point, but Braille printers seem to be just a part of a bigger dream he has in mind.

"I want to do engineering in the medical area when I grow up," he says. "And I want to finish college."


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