My name is Hossain Mohd. Faysal, and this is my personal blog. It currently has 6 posts in 4 categories which combinedly have 3835 words, which will take an average reader ( WPM) approximately 19.175 minutes to read. There are 1 featured posts, you should definitely check those out. The most recent post is “Why Jekyll?” which was published on . The last commit was on Friday, 13 Mar 2015 at 07:11 PM UTC.
I am an PhD candidate in ESE at the SEAS at UPENN. I am licensed as a Professional Engineer (P.E) to practice in the states of Texas, Massachusetts and California. I double majored in EECS and Mathematics during my undergraduate life at MIT, and currently focusing on Electrical Engineering for my post-graduate studies.
I was born and brought up in Doha. Yes, its a desert peninsula, yes we have camels and falcons and all the other Middle Eastern traits/stereotypes you can think of.
At some point in the not-terribly-distant future, I hope to found a self-sustaining collective of clever people, for fun, profit(?), and the promotion of human life in the universe. This might wind up in Qatar, Bangladesh, Scandinavia, the Massachusetts Bay Area, the SF Bay Area, Japan, Germany, or the dustbin of overly idealistic plans. (Yes, I have a special bin for overly idealistic plans. In my district they can’t be recycled with residential mixed paper.) The most challenging aspect of this concept is to curtail unproductive competition with other people who will inevitably have the same idea. (Some sort of cooperative federation…) I’m presently looking for people who might be interested in being a part of such an organization.
Anyways, for now I’m just working toward changing the face of Electrical Engineering forever. Not that I necessarily expect to succeed, but it’s something to strive for, and it’s a fun problem to work on.
Entrepreneur
Designer
Engineer
Inventor
I make stuff.
Beautiful, practical, meaningful stuff.
I make what I love.
I love what I do.
But over the years, I noticed that somehow, along the way, software designed to help us be creative, actually made us less creative. That’s because we believe our best ideas emerge when we use pencils and paper. So I set out to build tools that work the way I do.
Tools for the creative space — the 53 centimeters that magically link head, heart, and hand. Tools as simple as pencil and paper. Tools so essential, I really can’t imagine work without them.
For
the makers,
the creators,
the discoverers,
the original thinkers,
This is the space to create.