(LAUGHTER)
Ankur Gopal:
But, as time went on, she became more comfortable with the technology and very proud, so proud that when my friends would come over, she would look at them and say, you have an iPhone 3. I have an iPhone 4.
(LAUGHTER)
To Gopal, it was an epiphany. He could teach almost anyone to master modern technology.
He s spent the years since proving the point, not in Silicon Valley, but in his native state, whose economy he s been trying to transform.
Ankur Gopal:
I came to Kentucky, where my parents lived,in Owensboro, Kentucky, and worked out of their basement. Very cliche.
We’re here to celebrate Jake. | Family celebrates life of teen who disappeared while fishing in Ohio River
Four months after Jacob Stover disappeared in the Ohio River, family and friends gather to celebrate Kentucky teen’s life. Author: Chris Williams Updated: 11:21 PM EDT April 17, 2021
LOUISVILLE, Ky. St. Albert the Great holds a special place in the heart of the Stover family. Jacob “Jake” Stover went to grade school there, they celebrated his life in a mass there on Saturday morning and Saturday afternoon they gathered there a different kind of memorial.
“As much as I m trying not to cry, this is not a sad occasion”, insisted mother, Melissa Stover. “We re here to celebrate Jake.
Jake Stover s parents remember their 16-year-old son for the way he took advantage of every minute of his life. He loved life. There were so many things he wanted to do, but unfortunately he just didn t get a chance to do them, Shawn Stover said Wednesday, two days after his son s body was recovered from the Ohio River in Newburgh, Indiana nearly two months after the Prospect teen went missing while kayaking.
About 200 people gathered Wednesday evening under Big Four Bridge wearing red, Jake s favorite color for a vigil in his honor. The glow from the candles and red lights shining off the bridge lit the crowd as family and friends took turns sharing memories and the impact Jake had on their lives.