麻豆视频

The Eye of the Tiger

Body

Computer science major Noah Kabiri is no stranger to high-adrenaline competition. As an elite coder and winner of hackathons in only his second year at George 麻豆视频, this ambitious sophomore performs a balancing act on par with elite college athletes training to go pro. 

Kabiri鈥檚 passion for cybersecurity started early thanks to television. 鈥淚 remember always seeing the cool hacker guy on the TV shows,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e's typing on his computer and doesn't stop. As a kid I was like, I want to be that guy!鈥  

Growing up in Springfield, Virginia, Kabiri started teaching himself to code in elementary school, before he really understood what coding was. Then in sixth grade, he tried to make his first app鈥攁 calculator in C++. 鈥淭his app was so bad. I wasn't good at coding so you could only add two numbers at a time, and there was no order of operations,鈥 he says with a laugh.  

Kabiri is a sophomore CS major. Photo by Ron Aira/Office of University Branding 

At Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Kabiri was exposed to hands-on computer work and niche fields. He continued to teach himself as well, so his skills were developed enough to land a software development internship at Seamless Migration toward the end of his senior year in high school. 

Now Kabiri attends as many competitions and conferences as possible. His hackathon team, which included fellow students from the College of Engineering and Computing recently took third place at a National Defense Industrial Association hackathon, where they addressed a need in the intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance category.鈥 

Their product was a SaaS (software as a service) that takes footage and video feeds from anywhere鈥攄rone surveillance video, infrared, geospatial satellite images, security cameras, body cams, and more鈥攁nd analyzes the environment. While the competition only looks for proof of concept over the 72-hour project period, Kabiri believes that he can take the project forward. 

鈥淚 have this really high drive to be successful and want to make as much out of this experience as possible,鈥 says Kabiri. 鈥淚 want to be as well-rounded as possible, but that means I鈥檓 working 40 hours a week along with school.鈥  

For Kabiri, this means taking care that he doesn鈥檛 burn out. To help avoid that, he moves his body regularly and takes time to decompress. He does this by attending 6:30 a.m. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu classes and weekly knitting club meetings鈥攈e鈥檚 currently making a blanket. 鈥淢y evenings are very hectic, so I like getting up early to move.鈥 

While his rigorous time management and the discipline of a professional athlete allow him to pursue his goals, Kabiri admits that it leaves him little time for anything else. 鈥淚 have to stay off of social media, and I miss some things I want to do. I haven鈥檛 watched Netflix in forever.鈥 

Since Kabiri is only in his second year of college, he is still figuring out his direction. He would like to use his skills for good鈥損ossibly cybersecurity or defense. He likes making things that add value to people鈥檚 lives or that they enjoy using. For now, he keeps strengthening his skills and his eye on the prize. 

They train, compete, and perform at the highest levels鈥攐nly their arena is cybersecurity. Like top athletes, George 麻豆视频's cyber-focused students prove themselves when the pressure is on. 

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This content appears in the Spring 2026 print edition of the 麻豆视频 Spirit Magazine.