In today’s startup world, bold ideas often come from unexpected places. One such story comes out of Almaty, Kazakhstan, where 18-year-old Arlan Rakhmetzhanov has taken the entrepreneurial leap of a lifetime.
At an age when most teenagers are preparing for university entrance exams, Arlan decided to drop out of high school to chase his dream: building the next generation of AI coding tools. That decision has now turned into reality — his company Nozomio has raised $6.2 million in seed funding after completing the prestigious Y Combinator accelerator program.
What is Nozomio?
Nozomio is developing a tool called Nia, designed to make AI coding agents smarter. While AI models can generate code, they often lack context about a company’s existing codebase, documentation, or libraries. Nia fills this gap by indexing and enriching external codebases, giving AI agents the background they need to provide accurate, relevant, and production-ready code.
In simple terms: it’s like giving ChatGPT or GitHub Copilot the ability to “read the manual” before writing code.
The Journey So Far
- Self-taught beginnings: Arlan started learning coding on his own during high school.
- Unstoppable focus: He was once kicked out of math class — not for failing, but for taking an investor call during the lesson.
- Persistence with YC: He applied to Y Combinator twice before finally being accepted.
- Solo founder spirit: Today, he runs Nozomio by himself, with plans to recruit young and ambitious talent.
Nozomio’s story is more than just a personal win — it highlights a bigger trend:
- Young founders in emerging markets are no longer waiting for permission.
- They are competing on a global stage, building products for Silicon Valley and beyond.
- The barriers to entry have never been lower, but the rewards have never been higher.
From Almaty to Y Combinator, Arlan’s journey shows what’s possible when courage, skill, and timing come together.
With $6.2 million in the bank, Nozomio will continue building Nia, scale its engineering team, and push to become a core part of the AI developer stack.
If successful, this young dropout could inspire a new generation of Central Asian founders to think bigger, move faster, and take risks earlier.
Arlan’s story proves that the new age of entrepreneurship isn’t about diplomas — it’s about courage, speed, and building something the world needs.













