Base
Electronics, signal, systems, and software habits from GEII.
A cleaner map of the tools and habits that keep showing up across GEII projects, AVINI work, radio builds, documentation, and field practice.
Base
Electronics, signal, systems, and software habits from GEII.
Proof
Kart, prosthesis, radio, motorsport, and AVINI operations.
Mode
Build, test, document, hand off, then improve.
Working toolkit
Languages
Native
Main academic and technical reporting language, used for GEII coursework, presentations, and local project coordination.
Native
A second native language that keeps personal, family, and cross-cultural communication natural rather than translated.
C1
Advanced working level backed by Cambridge C1, TOEFL, and US admissions preparation.
B2
Useful conversational and academic range for travel, collaboration, and broader European contexts.
A1
Early-stage learning, kept as a small but active curiosity rather than a polished professional claim.
Skill Cards
Modeling, geometry choices, mechanism thinking, and early feasibility work for cross-domain prototypes.
DU prosthesis projectCircuit choices, PCB layout, constraints, validation prep, and turning a schematic into a board that can be checked.
KAH kart projectC, C++, control logic, tooling habits, and enough software structure to make hardware-facing systems usable.
KAH kart projectBreaking a problem into interfaces, constraints, blocks, and verification points before implementation gets messy.
DU prosthesis projectAntennas, reception, signal observation, ground-station thinking, and practical radio experimentation.
Radio WorksComparing expected behavior with observed behavior, finding weak assumptions, and iterating from test results.
KAH kart projectKeeping work moving in fast environments where timing, clean handoff, and reliable follow-through matter.
Motorsport case studyReports, technical summaries, presentations, and the habit of making reasoning readable to someone else.
Self-directed learning articleSlowing down, checking the situation, and making clean decisions when visibility, pressure, or timing gets tight.
Scuba diving field noteRole clarity, safety routines, equipment care, and the habit of staying useful to the group.
Scuba diving field noteReading terrain, planning before nightfall, managing resources, and keeping simple routines repeatable.
Bivouac field noteWorking through weather, fatigue, imperfect information, and changing conditions without letting standards collapse.
Bivouac field note