I am a Software Engineer with a B.S. in Applied Mathematics from CU Boulder.
I currently work at Cintron medical, a medical device company building electrosurgery generators.
While I am confident in my technical skills, I know that soft skills are essential for delivering value to customers/ clients, and keeping a team in sync. My work representing the software team to clients has developed excellent communication skills with a diversity of audiences.
Interests
I have a strong interest in finance and the abundance of data it unlocks for analysis. Building different models for analyzing financial data is especially fun for me, as it connects three of my main interests, software engineering, math/statistics, and finance.
Professionally, I've been working on bare metal embedded systems at Cintron Medical since October 2023. This has sharpened my low-level skills, and has given me an appreciation for safety, and complying with regulation standards, and documentation.
Skills, Tools, and Technologies
General Languages:
Python
C++
Bash
R
Excel
Libraries:
NumPy
Pandas
OpenCV
PyTorch
General Tools:
Git/Github
AWS
Google Cloud Platform
CLIs
Linux
REST
Firebase
NoSQL
PostgreSQL
Embedded software:
Bare metal systems
C
Keil uVision
Oscilloscope, and Multimeter, troubleshooting physical problems
Reading schematics
Web:
JavaScript
React
Vite
HTML/CSS
Mobile:
Swift
Xcode
Flutter and Dart
Android Studio
Soft skills
Through multiple presentation based projects and working on teams in many other projects, I built the ability to communicate with anyone about very technical fields. Working closely with other applied math and software engineering students, communicating technical ideas with them comes naturally. Through our presentations to a class where everyone focused on their own subjects, we learned to talk to technical audiences without relying on very aligned and specialized knowledge. My experience at Cintron has further developed my soft skills, especially when it comes to communication with non-technical stakeholders.
I highly value written communication. I have experience writing for technical non-experts by breaking down a piece of new applied mathematics research in the finance field for an undergraduate mathematics audience. Another big project was an 80 page report on Apple that myself and another applied mathematics student wrote. Each section required a single page executive summary, with the whole report itself requiring a single page executive summary. This gave me a lot of practice organizing and sifting through information, and delivering it to an audience with limited knowledge in my field. Finally, I took a class for engineers writing for non-technical audiences.Â