UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Rahul Emani is well on the path to being a leader in the cybersecurity industry. He has earned a CompTIA Security+ certification, which stands out on applications for top cybersecurity jobs in government and industry. He also has devised a way to maximize smart home technology at a fraction of the current cost.
And, he’s just a first-year student in the College of Information Sciences and Technology, with strong ambitions.
“I want to get my master’s degree before leaving Penn State,” he said. “Incorporating a graduate degree on top of a bachelor’s has me thinking at the level where I want to be.”
He first became interested in tech as a young child. Learning from his app-developer father, he started programming at age 12, and participated in a seventh-grade gifted program at Phoenixville that introduced him to Raspberry Pi — a small, inexpensive computer that teaches programming through fun and practical projects.
Those early experiences led him to Penn State, where he is among the first students to pursue a bachelor’s degree in Cybersecurity Analytics and Operations, which launched in fall 2017
“Cyber is the new frontier, where cyberattacks get more complex and more frequent day to day,” he said. “At the federal government level, highly classified information could be leaked if cybersecurity wasn’t a thing. It has a universal application, and I’m excited to be a part of this adventure.”
Emani is getting a head start on that adventure by leading research projects as an undergraduate. He presented his current project, which applies smart home technology using the inexpensive Raspberry Pi to enable input and output for up to 10 devices, at the University’s Undergraduate Research Exhibition on April 17.