Friday, February 6, 2026
13.1 C
New Delhi

Meet Soumith Chintala: Techie rejected by 12 US universities, now CTO of a top AI company

Meet Soumith Chintala: Indian-origin techie rejected by 12 US universities, now CTO of 'Thinking Machines Lab'

Soumith Chintala’s remarkable ascent from countless university and job rejections to co-creating PyTorch and reaching the role of VP at Meta is a powerful story of determination and perseverance.

Soumith Chintala’s journey from repeated academic and professional rejection to becoming one of the most influential figures in artificial intelligence has struck for many daydreaming techies, as he takes on a new role as chief technology officer (CTO) at Thinking Machines Lab, one of the largest artificial intelligence (AI) research companies.Chintala was once rejected by dozens of universities and employers but is known today as a co-creator of PyTorch and a former vice-president at Meta.His story was shared widely on social media and viewed more than a million times, resonating with students and professionals facing setbacks, particularly in India’s highly competitive education and job markets.

Early life, full of rejections

Chintala was born and raised in Hyderabad. He studied at Hyderabad Public School and later enrolled at Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT), often described as a tier two engineering college. By his own account, he struggled with mathematics early on and faced major setbacks when applying for postgraduate study in the United States.Despite scoring 1420 on the GRE, he was rejected by 12 US universities in his first attempt. He travelled to the US on a J-1 visa to attend Carnegie Mellon University without a clear plan and applied again to 15 universities. Only the University of Southern California accepted him, along with a late offer from New York University in 2010. At NYU, Chintala joined a lab led by Yann LeCun, working on early deep learning research. LeCun later became a central figure in AI and played an important role in Chintala’s career.

Visa hurdles

After completing his master’s degree, Chintala faced another obstacle. He was turned down for nearly every job he applied for, including roles at Google and DeepMind. His only offer was as a test engineer at Amazon.With help from a PhD mentor, he later joined a small startup called MuseAmi, where he worked on mobile deep learning and helped build one of the fastest AI inference engines for smartphones between 2011 and 2012.His immigration status added further problems. Chintala was bound by a J-1 visa requirement to return home for two years, and he spent months securing waivers from USCIS and the US State Department before qualifying for an H-1B visa. He later obtained an EB-1 green card.

PyTorch and rise at Meta

Chintala’s career changed after he immersed himself in open-source work, particularly Torch7. His contributions led to an opportunity at Facebook AI Research in 2014, after he reconnected with LeCun.Starting as a software engineer, he helped co-create PyTorch as part of a small team. The project nearly collapsed due to internal resistance, and Chintala has spoken openly about the emotional toll of that period. The framework was eventually saved and officially launched in 2017.Over the next decade, PyTorch became one of the most widely used machine learning platforms in the world. Chintala spent 11 years in Meta and rose through the ranks from L4 engineer to vice-president and fellow, becoming a central figure in AI infrastructure.

New chapter

In November 2025, Chintala left Meta to join Thinking Machines Lab as its newly appointed CTO. He has looked back and credited mentors like Yann LeCun and Pierre Sermanet, as well as friends and his parents, for supporting him through years of uncertainty and financial strain.His story has been praised as a lesson in persistence, but many say he still benefited from elite academic exposure. Even so, for many young engineers, Chintala’s rise after more than a decade of rejection stands as proof that setbacks do not define the future. Go to Source

Hot this week

Epstein’s deathbed will: Who stood to inherit multimillion-dollar fortune, and what about the victims?

FILE – Documents that were included in the U.S. Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files are photographed Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. Read More

‘When told I’m 75, I said 25 yrs left’: PM Modi tells students to focus on future

NEW DELHI: PM Narendra Modi on Friday urged students not to view success in exams as the sole purpose of their education and said an individual’s character and temperament, and not just grades, determine success in life. Read More

US accuses China of secret N-tests in 2020

GENEVA: The US accused China Friday of conducting a secret nuclear test in 2020 as it called for a new arms control treaty that would bring in China as well as Russia. Read More

‘I don’t know what will happen to me’: Pappu Yadav after arrest in 1995 case

Purnea MP Pappu Yadav Following his arrest by Patna Police in connection with a 1995 case, Purnea MP Pappu Yadav said he was unsure about what lay ahead or where he was being taken. Read More

Inside the life of a paparazzo: Yogen Shah and Viral Bhayani

In an era where paparazzi videos trend within minutes and celebrity sightings become instant content, the idea of a “typical workday” no longer applies. Read More

Topics

Epstein’s deathbed will: Who stood to inherit multimillion-dollar fortune, and what about the victims?

FILE – Documents that were included in the U.S. Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files are photographed Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. Read More

‘When told I’m 75, I said 25 yrs left’: PM Modi tells students to focus on future

NEW DELHI: PM Narendra Modi on Friday urged students not to view success in exams as the sole purpose of their education and said an individual’s character and temperament, and not just grades, determine success in life. Read More

US accuses China of secret N-tests in 2020

GENEVA: The US accused China Friday of conducting a secret nuclear test in 2020 as it called for a new arms control treaty that would bring in China as well as Russia. Read More

‘I don’t know what will happen to me’: Pappu Yadav after arrest in 1995 case

Purnea MP Pappu Yadav Following his arrest by Patna Police in connection with a 1995 case, Purnea MP Pappu Yadav said he was unsure about what lay ahead or where he was being taken. Read More

Inside the life of a paparazzo: Yogen Shah and Viral Bhayani

In an era where paparazzi videos trend within minutes and celebrity sightings become instant content, the idea of a “typical workday” no longer applies. Read More

Norway’s Crown Princess apologises for Epstein link, says she did not understand who he was; husband backs her

Norway’s Crown Princess Mette-Marit was one of the first celebrities to issue a statement as soon as her name came up in the latest release of Epstein Files. Read More

Chicago woman shooting: Judge allows release of video, Border Patrol agent’s texts who shot her five times

A federal judge on Friday cleared the way for Chicago woman Marimar Martinez to publicly release critical evidence from her case, including text messages from the Border Patrol agent who shot her, body camera footage, photos, and FBI Read More

Obama ‘monkey’ video: From birtherism to the Nobel Prize — why Donald Trump is so obsessed with Barack Obama

Nearly a decade after Barack Obama left the White House, Donald Trump continues to invoke his predecessor, keeping Obama at the center of political attacks, online commentary, and viral controversies, a pattern that has resurfaced onc Read More

Related Articles