
The passion for combining finance with technology, aiming to explain the stock market in an understandable way to people who have no idea about finance, resulted in a book, Moneymakers, in 2020, which became a SPIEGEL-Bestseller.Īya was only 2 when her family migrated to Germany from the city of Sulaymaniyah in Iraqi Kurdistan.

She is a strong advocate for the platform ‘Girls in STEM’, which aims to inspire high school and college students to be interested in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, and she mentors young coders at countless events. She is a true innovator and young spirit, as the magazine Forbes listed her in their 30under30 young entrepreneurs list in 2019. She worked for several technology companies as a consultant and was only 22 when she set up her own company to work on combining innovative fashion projects with technology. She was under 21 when she became the most well-known woman software developer in Germany.

‘Mrs Code’ is the nickname in Germany of 24-year-old Aya Jaff, who was only 15 when she built her first software programme on the school curriculum at high school, which very quickly brought her fame, especially after a brief three-line story of her engagement with technology at a very young age was published in the New York Times when she was 17. You can find all the information about the full 12-day program of Porsche at #IAA19 on the Porsche Newsroom.By Dr. All-day long, we will focus on new concepts, solutions, and applications on and off the road, always driven by digitization, automation - made for people. Existing Porsche partners from the technology and digital scene, start-ups from the Porsche Ventures program as well as futurologists, architects and programmers will take part.

Porsche’s “Next Visions Day” at the IAA focuses on dialogue with different perspectives and different stakeholders. Discussing tomorrow - international technology experts visit Porsche Today, digital services such as integrated navigation services, driver assistance systems or intelligent services based on vehicle data are decisive criteria when Germans buy a vehicle. We have come to the point where digital is worth more than many hp. Every second citizen in Germany wants to buy an electric car or even an autonomously controlled vehicle. If you believe a current BITKOM study, the car divides the Germans.
