I’ve been fascinated by technology for as long as I can remember. Not just using it, but understanding it. I was the kid who wanted to know what was inside the remote control, the teenager who built computers for fun, and eventually the engineering student who couldn’t resist diving deeper into how hardware and software actually work. That curiosity carried me through degrees in electrical and computer engineering, with math and computer science minors. I loved the feeling of peeling back the layers of a system and seeing how all the pieces fit together.
Somewhere along the way, I realized that my passion wasn’t limited to building things myself. I loved hearing about what other people were building too. I loved the spark in someone’s voice when they explained a new idea, the cleverness behind a design choice, the “aha” moment when a concept finally clicked. And that’s what nudged me toward patent law. It’s a field where you get to sit at the intersection of creativity, engineering, and problem‑solving. You spend your days talking to inventors, diving into new technologies, and helping people protect the things they’ve worked so hard to create. For someone who geeks out about innovation, it’s a pretty perfect fit.
But the maker in me never went away. If anything, working in patent law only fueled it. Every day I get exposed to new ideas, new problems, and new ways of thinking. And that energy spills over into my own projects. Whether I’m tinkering with 3D printers, automating my house, or helping someone prototype a weird little gadget, it all comes from the same place: a genuine love of technology and a desire to make things better, cooler, or just more fun.
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