(Bloomberg) -- When Sehat Sutardja was a 12-year-old
boy in Jakarta, he dismantled shortwave radios and played with
voltage regulators for fun. Tinkering in his family's parts-
strewn workroom, Sutardja dreamed of designing and building his
own gadgets. His parents fretted that their firstborn son would
become nothing more than a television repairman.
``They wanted me to be a medical doctor,'' says Sutardja,
45, whose black hair is traced with gray.
Read more at Bloomberg Currencies News
boy in Jakarta, he dismantled shortwave radios and played with
voltage regulators for fun. Tinkering in his family's parts-
strewn workroom, Sutardja dreamed of designing and building his
own gadgets. His parents fretted that their firstborn son would
become nothing more than a television repairman.
``They wanted me to be a medical doctor,'' says Sutardja,
45, whose black hair is traced with gray.
Read more at Bloomberg Currencies News
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