
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This week is the first installment of The Ones Who Succeed NEXT GEN, a mini-series featuring one-off conversations I have with up and coming entrepreneurs, leaders, builders and innovators, someone who is just at the beginning of their career, who I believe will go on to influence and shape our next generation. On today's episode, I am joined by 17-year-old Brain-Computer Interface Dev, among many other things, Luke Piette. Luke is a graduate of The Knowledge Society, a 10-month human accelerator program for curious and ambitious teens. His website LukePiette.com is full of previous projects he's worked on, including many applications and brain-computer interface projects, my personal favourite being a brain-controlled drone he built this summer. Luke, originally from Toronto, is currently based in San Francisco, attending Minerva University. I sat down with Luke to discuss his origin story, his perspective on technology and innovation and, of course, his professional ambitions for the years to come. This conversation was recorded on September 1, 2020, thanks for listening!
4.9
2424 ratings
This week is the first installment of The Ones Who Succeed NEXT GEN, a mini-series featuring one-off conversations I have with up and coming entrepreneurs, leaders, builders and innovators, someone who is just at the beginning of their career, who I believe will go on to influence and shape our next generation. On today's episode, I am joined by 17-year-old Brain-Computer Interface Dev, among many other things, Luke Piette. Luke is a graduate of The Knowledge Society, a 10-month human accelerator program for curious and ambitious teens. His website LukePiette.com is full of previous projects he's worked on, including many applications and brain-computer interface projects, my personal favourite being a brain-controlled drone he built this summer. Luke, originally from Toronto, is currently based in San Francisco, attending Minerva University. I sat down with Luke to discuss his origin story, his perspective on technology and innovation and, of course, his professional ambitions for the years to come. This conversation was recorded on September 1, 2020, thanks for listening!