"This is Anwesha," she said, addressing the lens. "Project 121. They say you can't teach a machine to feel curious, but I think they’re looking at it the wrong way. Curiosity isn't a line of code; it's a quest."
Rohan clicked it. The screen flickered with the grainy resolution of a handheld camera. Anwesha 121mp4
The hard drive was a graveyard of abandoned ideas, but one folder stood out: Archives_2024 . Inside sat a single video file, titled simply . "This is Anwesha," she said, addressing the lens
The video cut to black. Rohan looked at the date on the file. It had been saved exactly 121 days before today. He realized the "quest" wasn't over—it was just waiting for someone to hit play and continue the search. Curiosity isn't a line of code; it's a quest
"One hundred and twenty-one days until the project goes live," she said, her voice full of hope. "One hundred and twenty-one days to change how we learn."
As the video played, Rohan realized he wasn't looking at a simple home movie. Anwesha was documenting her journey—inspired by speakers like Anwesha Mishra —to bridge the gap between technology and education. She spoke about using robots not just for tasks, but to "Spread Smiles" and teach children in remote villages who had never seen a computer. The "121" wasn't a version number. It was a countdown.