It seems its his fourth book. Nice to see he's not from a rich family yet getting the opportunities early.
Teenager techie set for his fourth book release
The twists and turns of dingy lanes in Old Delhi's Kasab Pura take you to a one-room rented accommodation where one of the country's youngest cyber wizards and "ethical hacker" Sahil Khan lives. He is now getting ready for the release of his fourth book.
Sixteen-year-old Sahil has achieved a lot. He has invented nine computer games and written three books on computer sciences, making him one of the youngest people in the country to have published on the subject.
"My fourth book Tricks of Email Hacking is ready for release this month," Sahil told IANS.
Sahil, who calls himself an "ethical hacker", lives here with his younger brother and mother.
His mother gives tuitions to schoolchildren to carve out a modest living, while his father is a hakeem (practitioner of Unani medicine) in Mumbai. The family hails from a small village, Bugrasi, in Bulandshahr district of Uttar Pradesh.
Sahil, nicknamed 'Indian Einstein' by a section of the electronic media, invented nine computer games when he was 13 and wrote his first book on computer hacking a year later.
"When I made my first game at home I told mother, but she was not excited, thinking it would just be a petty thing. Later she realised when my teacher told her. Soon the school formally announced it and I got an award from Newspapers in Education (NIE)," Sahil told IANS.
Sahil, a humble and soft-spoken teenager, did not attend any professional course in computer science and he also did not own a personal computer until recently. His first interaction with computers began when he learnt internet chatting with his father who stays in Mumbai.
"Since then he got interested in gaming on computers and though we did not have enough money to buy a computer, soon somehow I managed to buy him a PC on instalments," said Sahil's mother Atiya Suleman.
Sahil, a student of Class 10 at Harcourt Butler Sr. Secondary School, however, doesn't bask in his achievements and feels that every person has some special quality which needs to be pursued at the right time.
What are his plans for the future?
"For now my main focus is on board examinations and then I will try to get into an Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) and become a cyber expert of repute," Sahil said.
Sahil's first book Hackers and Crackers, which was published by ABC, was launched by Science and Technology Minister Kapil Sibal.
The second part of Hackers and Crackers was published by Diamond Publications and was launched by Women and Child Development Minister Renuka Chowdhury.
"We have published two editions of Hackers and Crackers in 10 months. This is a very helpful book and we have been getting an overwhelming response; so now we are translating this book into Hindi, Gujarati, Marathi and Tamil. The other book The Anatomy of Computer Viruses has been a favourite among people," said Narender Verma, owner of Diamond Publications.
Sahil has also come in for praise from computer experts.
"Sahil's books give great grounding for any common man to understand the problem of computer viruses and computer hacking. This book can be a great help for the readers to protect their computers from virus attacks and hacking. Computer viruses are, however, a very vast area of study which has a number of complex aspects and some of them are not included," said Ahmad Kamal, a lecturer in computer science at Jamia Millia University.