Read The Story Of Mathematician Shakuntala Devi – India’s Human Computer

Conceived in a helpless family, Shakuntala needed to drop out of school since her dad, a bazaar specialist, couldn't manage the cost of the month to month school charge of Rs 2.

Shakuntala Devi, conceived on 4 November 1929, was an Indian author who was broadly known as 'mental mini-computer' and 'human PC'. As kid wonder, she was even named in the 1982 release of The Guinness Book of World Records.

During her adolescence, her dad was astounded to perceive how Shakuntala could dominate match of cards without fail. He discovered that she was remembering all the card numbers and their arrangement. She had the option to foresee the grouping of cards in the ensuing rounds of the game and in this way hold back to pick cards deliberately.

Subsequently, he chose to instruct her scientific activities like augmentation, division and square root. Later she began going with him to carnival and did shows hypnotizing everybody. At 6 years old, she gave her first significant show at Mysore University. From that point onward, visits to Europe and Americas got normal.

There was news on her telling how she could compute the 23rd base of a 201-digit number in only 50 seconds! See underneath:
There are more such stories:
  1. In 1980 at the Computer Department of Imperial College, London, Shakuntala demonstrated the multiplication of two 13-digit numbers 7,686,369,774,870 × 2,465,099,745,779. She calculated the answer 18,947,668,177,995,426,462,773,730 in 28 seconds. This was the event mentioned in the Guinness Book of Records.
  2. In 1988, she calculated the cube root of 61,629,875, and the seventh root of 170,859,375 without writing it down or using a calculator which was noticed by the famous professor Arthur Jensen. These findings were published in the academic journal Intelligence in 1990.
In 1977, she even wrote a book on homosexuality called ‘The World of Homosexuals’, which is considered to be the first study of homosexuality in India. She once said she studied this topic closely after she got married to a homosexual man.
In 2013, Shakuntala Devi passed away at the age of 83. Her books were all about mathematics, puzzles, and astrology. To name a couple of them: ‘Fun with Numbers’ and ‘Puzzles to Puzzle You’. We feel so proud while writing her story! 

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