BScIT student in Kathmandu exploring the overlap between secure systems, thoughtful interfaces, and clear digital communication.

I build thoughtful digital experiences through design, development, and security thinking.

Sobisha Agrawal
Sobisha Agrawal

I am learning how the web earns trust: through accessible interfaces, responsible security habits, and design decisions that make technology feel less intimidating.

03 featured studies 30+ collaborations 04 learning tracks
Selected work

Projects as small case studies, not thumbnails in a grid.

01

Frontend / Personal Brand

Editorial Portfolio System

A portfolio redesign focused on sounding human, showing learning honestly, and presenting technical curiosity with visual restraint.

Problem

The previous site was clean, but too balanced and card-heavy. It looked more like a generated template than a personal point of view.

Approach

I treated the page like an editorial profile: stronger opening statement, fewer repeated structures, more story, and more deliberate whitespace.

Outcome

A portfolio that feels calmer, more memorable, and more credible for internships, collaborations, and early professional opportunities.

HTMLCSSJavaScriptResponsive Design
Trust-led portfolio

Design, frontend, security thinking.

02

Cybersecurity / Research

Security Awareness Notes

A learning project that turns beginner security concepts into practical, everyday explanations.

Problem

Cybersecurity can feel like a distant technical topic when the examples are too abstract.

Approach

I organized notes around real behavior: passwords, phishing, permissions, authentication, and risk awareness.

Learning

Security is not only about tools. It is also about habits, communication, and designing systems people can understand.

Security BasicsAuthenticationRiskResearch
Security notesRisk map
Phishing
Passwords
Permissions
Authentication

Trust signals, recovery, safer defaults.

03

UI/UX / Interface Thinking

Human-Centered Interface Study

A design exercise exploring how layout, writing, and visual hierarchy can reduce hesitation in a digital flow.

Problem

Users often lose confidence when an interface does not explain what matters or what happens next.

Approach

I mapped the flow, created wireframes, simplified labels, and used spacing to make decisions easier to scan.

Outcome

A cleaner flow that treats design as guidance, not decoration.

FigmaWireframingPrototypeUX Writing

Technology became interesting to me when I started seeing it as a trust problem.

A good interface is not just beautiful. It helps someone understand where they are, what they can do, and whether they can trust the system in front of them. That is why frontend development, design, and cybersecurity all feel connected to me.

Cybersecurity matters because people live so much of their lives through digital systems. Design matters because even secure systems can fail people if they feel confusing. Frontend development is where those ideas become visible and usable.

Long term, I want to grow into someone who can help build digital products that are secure, accessible, and calm to use.

Now

What I'm exploring right now

This is the part of my learning that feels most alive at the moment.

Current question

How can a frontend interface quietly guide people toward safer decisions?

Web security

How everyday interfaces can prevent risky behavior before it happens.

Authentication systems

Login flows, permissions, trust signals, and user confidence.

Accessibility

Designing interfaces that remain clear across devices, users, and contexts.

Secure frontend architecture

How frontend choices affect privacy, clarity, and safer user experiences.

Design systems

Creating consistency without making every screen feel identical.

A learning path shaped by curiosity, then design, then code, then security.

Curiosity

Wanting to understand how digital products work underneath the surface.

Design

Learning to make ideas clearer through structure, hierarchy, and empathy.

Frontend

Turning layouts into responsive, usable pages with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

Security

Asking how products protect people, data, trust, and attention.

Future Direction

Combining security thinking with design and frontend craft in real projects.

Capabilities

The tools are simple. The goal is thoughtful execution.

How I use them

To make interfaces that are understandable, usable, and more trustworthy.

Frontend Development

  • HTML
  • CSS
  • JavaScript
  • React fundamentals
  • Responsive interfaces

UI/UX Design

  • Wireframing
  • Prototyping
  • Design systems
  • User flows
  • Interface hierarchy

Cybersecurity

  • Security fundamentals
  • Networking
  • Linux basics
  • Authentication concepts
  • Security research

Tools

  • Figma
  • GitHub
  • VS Code
  • Canva
  • Content planning
Certifications

Structured learning that supports the direction, not a certificate dump.

Learning evidence

Cybersecurity Fundamentals

Security concepts, safer behavior, and risk awareness.

Issuer: Cybersecurity learning track / Relevance: foundation for secure product thinking

Networking Concepts

Understanding how systems connect before learning how they fail.

Issuer: Networking course / Relevance: base layer for cybersecurity study

UI/UX Design Practice

Wireframes, prototypes, and design decisions that reduce friction.

Issuer: Design practice / Relevance: clearer frontend and product decisions

A few notes about how I work

Sobisha brings curiosity, consistency, and a thoughtful approach to learning technology and design.

Academic MentorComputer science learning context

Her design work shows care for clarity, visual balance, and the person using the interface.

Design FeedbackUI/UX project review

Sobisha communicates clearly and understands how to present content in a way that feels authentic.

Brand CollaborationDigital content partnership

Open to internships, collaborations, cybersecurity learning opportunities, and meaningful digital projects.

Especially the kind where design clarity, frontend craft, and security awareness all matter.