Santosh Ganji, PhD sivasantosh2@gmail.com
https://keys.openpgp.org/search?q=B7CB589B041B638A
Santosh Ganji, PhD sivasantosh2@gmail.com
https://keys.openpgp.org/search?q=B7CB589B041B638A
I was a post-doctoral researcher at Texas A&M University working on large language models. I am update my personal research at www.llmnerd.dev. For many iterations, I assisted TAMU ECEN flagship ML course: ECEN 740 taught by Prof. P R Kumar.
I consider myself luckiest to have met my Doctoral Advisor, Dr. P. R. Kumar. He introduced me to the beautiful art of solving the most challenging systems problems in a minimalist way. I am equally excited and grateful to have defended my thesis with Dr. Paulraj on my committee.
I have dedicated quite a lot time developing deep understanding of machine learning, LLM post-training and controlling agents.
These days, I mostly work on LLM fine-tuning, and developing agents. I worked on Web Agents at Amazon. Now, mostly focused on Coding Agents, and Voice Agents.
Tutorvi: Voice only conversational tutor, that can retrieve relevant information to it context with <9ms latency.
I completely rebuilt an Agentic IDE with modern features like efficient context compression, caching, LSP, and defacto deep we research.
In the past, I developed Cellular Standards, built IoT wireless networks, and solved some challenging problems in directional networks.
I do enjoy photography, especially high speed subjects; its intellectually stimulating and requires a lot of hacks and patience: Flickr. Ham Radio: General License: KI5AVL. I'm in Job Market, Please reach out
Past work:
mmWave Works!
Our protocols ensure narrow directional mmWave links maintain high received signal strength,
Without any need for additional sensors, motion tracking and special surface!
mmWave Works under blockage too!
Simple algorithms are sufficient to maintain Line of Sight and Non-Line of Sight links
We show on both 60 GHz Software defined radios and on the off-the-shelf devices mmWave links can reliably work in pedestrian blockages.
Internet has been changing our lives in ways we cannot even imagine. Open and safe information access is a must for everyone who is connected online. I can't think of any better way than constantly educating ourselves. Some blogs I follow in that regard
https://epic.org/
Crazy enough! just build your own goddamn search engine. Sounds like Tor+IPFS: Veilid is just amazing!
Office: 332B, Wisenbaker Research Centre, TAMU-77843