"Go beyond the impossible and kick reason to the curb!"
— Kamina, Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann
I'm Enam Amevo. My name means God's Gift. As the child of Togolese educators and a product of IB schools, I am curious about everything, and want to learn as much as I can.
Engineering wasn't the plan at all. I got into film school at LMU, one of the top programs in the country, but could not afford to attend. I still love film deeply, along with manga, psychology, anthropology, history, comic books, etc. Honestly, I just love learning about how people and the world work. I think my love for humanity makes me a good engineer. We should care about how people experience things as our work informs how people experience life. The creativity I pull from storytelling and art directly fuels how I think about design problems. My goal has always been to bring both intellect and creativity to everything I build. I want to build hardware that changes lives.
My first exposure to engineering was at Apple's Engineering Technology Camp the summer before my senior year. We learned and worked across a wide range of engineering disciplines, but working with sensors and microcontrollers was my favorite part. When I had to pivot from my film dreams, I knew where to go.
I'm a 3rd year Electrical Engineering student at the Georgia Institute of Technology, with threads in Circuit Technology and Signal Processing. I work across the full hardware stack: analog design in Cadence Virtuoso, RTL in Verilog, embedded C, as well as assembly language and real-time DSP on multicore hardware.
B.S. Electrical Engineering
Threads: Circuit Technology, Signal Processing
Minor: Materials Science & Engineering
I want to do real hardware work, that affects peoples daily lives whether they know it or not. Technology that can contribute to better healthcare outcomes and also global sustainability efforts. Hardware that can be used to help bridge gaps for the disabled. Chips, circuits, and systems are the invisible infrastructure that make everything else possible.
I want to impact the fields of computing, healthcare, energy, and even film and television through electrical engineering. I believe deeply in the intersection of technical skill and creative vision, and I am determined to excel in both.
In general, I like to help people so I am also involved on campus! I am the historian for the GTSBE TORCH committee, committee chair for BLIECE (Black, Latino, and Indigenous Students in ECE), and was on the committee for the 2026 IEEE RoboTech Hackathon. I also volunteer as a Peer Instructor at the Hive, Georgia Tech's ECE student-run makerspace!
Feel free to reach out. I'd love to connect!
Email me at eamevo3@gatech.edu with any opportunities!
Connect with me on LinkedIn!