Young Ghanaian student Tyrone Marhguy working with salvaged electronic components and circuit boards

Teen Builds Computer Brain From Scrap Electronics in Ghana

🤯 Mind Blown

A Ghanaian student once nearly denied admission over his dreadlocks is now turning electronic waste into working computer components. Tyrone Marhguy's self-taught journey shows how curiosity can transform trash into innovation.

While most people toss broken gadgets in the trash, Tyrone Marhguy sees possibility. The young Ghanaian innovator has successfully built a computer brain component entirely from discarded electronics and scrap materials.

Tyrone's story began with a different kind of obstacle. Four years ago, Achimota School nearly rejected his admission because he wears dreadlocks as part of his Rastafarian faith. That controversy made headlines across Ghana.

But Tyrone wasn't interested in letting others define his path. Since age 12, he's been teaching himself electronics by watching online videos, taking apart broken devices, and studying how individual components work. No formal engineering classes, just pure determination and hands-on learning.

"Best you can get is to learn science. Nobody tells you; you can connect this tool to that one to form this," he told Joy Learning TV. His classroom became his workbench, and his textbooks were the insides of damaged gadgets that others had thrown away.

His school journey had its own challenges. Achimota didn't offer biology classes, so Tyrone took elective ICT instead. Rather than seeing it as a limitation, he found his own path to learning about science and technology beyond formal lessons.

Teen Builds Computer Brain From Scrap Electronics in Ghana

Why This Inspires

Tyrone's innovation matters beyond the technical achievement. He's proving that brilliant minds don't fit into neat categories or stereotypes.

His appearance has sometimes caused people to judge him before recognizing his intelligence and creativity. By building sophisticated technology from literal garbage, he's reshaping what people imagine when they think of a young African innovator.

He's also thinking about the next generation. When Ghana's president announced AI lessons in schools, Tyrone called it "a terrific initiative." He believes students as young as primary school can grasp AI concepts, while high schoolers should already be using it for complex tasks.

From salvaged electronics to working computer components, Tyrone is building more than machines. He's proving that talent and potential exist everywhere, waiting to be recognized.

His message is simple: innovation doesn't require expensive labs or prestigious credentials. Sometimes it just needs curiosity, persistence, and the willingness to see value where others see waste.

Based on reporting by Myjoyonline Ghana

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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