Hi!
Thank you for visiting my website! I'm a first-year PhD student in the EECS department at UC Berkeley advised by Professor Sagar Karandikar. I love tinkering with, thinking about, and analyzing computer systems.
To me, the most urgent concern in computing is reducing carbon emissions. Between 2 and 4% of all carbon emitted globally can be attributed to information and computing technology.
My research as an undergraduate has spanned the heart of the computing stack from microarchitecture to software systems. This includes my senior thesis, which focused on reducing system-on-chip emissions by sharing memory hardware between multiple hardware accelerators, and Omniglot, a framework for facilitating safe interactions between programming languages with different type- and memory-safety invariants.
I spent the summer of 2023 at JPL developing embedded software for the JPL-designed Sphinx single board computer.
I received a bachelor's in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Princeton University this past spring, where I was lucky enough to work with Professors Margaret Martonosi, Sharad Malik, and Amit Levy. I was honored to receive Princeton ECE's top award, the Charles I. Young Memorial Prize.
Less formally I've built 4 increasingly complex Pacman playing robots, a PC fan controller, a keyboard hidden in a 3-ring binder, a 544 segment display, some development boards, a benchtop power supply, a small car and smart traffic light system, and added namespaces to the C programming language.
Even less formally I'm a dnd nerd (love a board game cafe), I enjoy playing and watching soccer (I was the captain of the first ever LA Bulls team), and I'm an expert at getting mad at the news.
I'm an extremely proficient talker. You should send me an email if you want to chat about sustainable computing, or anything!