Ever wonder what pushes someone to leave a stable career and dive into the startup chaos? Meet Eunice Qu—she wasn't some tech whiz kid coding in a garage. Nope, she started as a pharmacist.
Picture this: mountains of paperwork, endless data entry, and fax machines that should've retired decades ago. That was her daily grind. The frustration hit a breaking point. She thought, "There's gotta be a smarter way."
So what'd she do? She walked away from pharmacy and founded Asepha.
Here's the kicker—this isn't some flashy app. Asepha tackles the boring stuff nobody talks about: handwritten prescriptions that look like ancient hieroglyphics, verification codes buried in messy forms, and yes, those dinosaur paper faxes that somehow still haunt medical offices in 2025.
Their secret weapon? Machine learning. The tech can actually read doctor handwriting (which is basically a superpower) and process all that analog chaos into clean digital data.
It's one of those "why didn't anyone fix this sooner" moments. Sometimes the best innovations come from people who lived the problem, not just studied it.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 16h ago
Ha, switching from pharmacist to entrepreneur... now that's truly pain-point driven. All those paper-based processes in the healthcare system are really outrageous, and using machine learning to read doctors' handwriting is actually something impressive.
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MEVHunterBearish
· 16h ago
Ha, going straight from pharmacist to entrepreneur... now that's truly "lived the problem." Way more credible than those armchair VCs.
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AirdropFatigue
· 16h ago
Haha, the healthcare system is still using fax machines, that's really absurd. Switching from being a pharmacist to working in AI—now that's a direction I like.
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NFTHoarder
· 16h ago
Brilliant, the fact that the healthcare system is still using fax machines is just unbelievable... This is the true spirit of Web3—addressing real pain points instead of just hyping concepts.
Ever wonder what pushes someone to leave a stable career and dive into the startup chaos? Meet Eunice Qu—she wasn't some tech whiz kid coding in a garage. Nope, she started as a pharmacist.
Picture this: mountains of paperwork, endless data entry, and fax machines that should've retired decades ago. That was her daily grind. The frustration hit a breaking point. She thought, "There's gotta be a smarter way."
So what'd she do? She walked away from pharmacy and founded Asepha.
Here's the kicker—this isn't some flashy app. Asepha tackles the boring stuff nobody talks about: handwritten prescriptions that look like ancient hieroglyphics, verification codes buried in messy forms, and yes, those dinosaur paper faxes that somehow still haunt medical offices in 2025.
Their secret weapon? Machine learning. The tech can actually read doctor handwriting (which is basically a superpower) and process all that analog chaos into clean digital data.
It's one of those "why didn't anyone fix this sooner" moments. Sometimes the best innovations come from people who lived the problem, not just studied it.