A 5-Year-Old Passed a Microsoft IT Technician Exam

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http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-30054140

Ayan Qureshi is in many ways a normal young boy. Apart from the fact that, at the age of just five years old, he passed an exam to become the youngest Microsoft Certified Professional ever.

Ayan—whose dad happens to be an IT consultant—had to answer a selection of multiple choice, drag-n-drop and scenario-based questions to pass the test, which is usually taken by people who want to become IT technicians. He explained to the BBC that he found the exam "difficult but enjoyable."

"The hardest challenge was explaining the language of the test to a five-year-old. But he seemed to pick it up and has a very good memory," explained Ayan's father Asim to the BBC. "Too much computing at this age can cause a negative effect, but in Ayan's case he has cached this opportunity."

Since passing the exam, Ayan has built his own home network, and spends around two hours each day learning about operating systems and software. Apparently, he hopes to set up a UK-based tech hub one day.
 
Dawg at his age I was watching cartoons all day
Bro will probably build Skynet by the time he is 10 :lol:
 
he looks evil

that stare with those beady lil eyes and that smile..
 
Maybe he just understands it to where it's simple

Some people minds work that way.

He could be dope on that end...

But still a 5 year old when it comes to how to handle a bully, or math.


I remember I knew a dude that could literally hear a song twice, and a sing along with it the third time. Really mind blowing because he would know every word.

But he couldn't do math for ****. Dude failed TAKS and TAAS (Texas standardized testing) up until the last go round.


Some people's minds just work differently.

Good stuff though, young famb. :pimp:
 
What that pose to mean?

It means that most IT folks are Indian. The kid's dad is an IT professional and he was raised in an household that encouraged him to be guided in it. Hell, who's to say he wasn't "pushed"?

In any case, good for the kid to have accomplished something at such a young age.
 
"The hardest challenge was explaining the language of the test to a five-year-old. But he seemed to pick it up and has a very good memory,"

I mean, if you dumbed the language down, I bet most of us could pass the test.
 
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