I'm from Albany, New York and I'm a senior at Cornell University in the College of Engineering majoring in computer science. I will be graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in the year 2024.
Over the Summer in 2023, I worked as a software engineering intern at Publicis Sapient. I worked with a team of software engineers and product managers to design, develop, and deploy an intelligent standalone AI chatbot called HenrAI for a car dealership company. It is compatible with web and mobile app and it was developed utilizing React, Python, SQL, and Google Cloud's Vertex AI.
Over the Summer in 2021, I worked as a software research intern at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. For this job, I learned to utilize the Apache Arrow package using Python to research its effectiveness in processing large amounts of data. To analyze this, I wrote and compiled code to record memory and performance of Apache Arrow's dictionary encoding and compression methods by testing over 30GB of data, using several different data sources. You can find my research results and code here.
Starting in Fall of 2023, I have been a Teaching Assistant for CS 3300 (Data-driven Web-apps) at Cornell University. Responsibilities include attending weekly grading meetings, holding weekly office hours, participating in online Q&A, and holding mentorship meetings with student project groups.
Outside of work, I have many hobbies and interests including playing the piano, the violin, and the guitar, coding, baking, and drawing! In the future, I plan on learning some more instruments and getting back into reading books.
This is a website to introduce myself and some things about me.
OCamlMon is a recreation of Pokemon, built in OCaml! From wild encounters to exciting gym battles, you'll be able to explore the world of OCamlMon and build up your own team of battle-ready OCamlMons.
This was a project that took around 2 months which I and two of my friends created as part of our 3110 class OCaml class. Using functional programming was a new challenge that we were able to step through and what resulted was this game!
This group GUI project coded in Java simulates a simple world of critters that wander around, eat food, reproduce, and evolve! Critters move around on a hexagonal grid and need energy to survive. They gain a little energy from the sun in each time step as long as they are not moving. Critters may also attack each other. When critters run out of energy, they die and become food for other critters. If critters accumulate enough energy, they can reproduce.
The simulation is implemented as a networked Java service with a graphical front end. This design permits multiple users to view and interact with the same virtual world.
This website is another side project! I coded it up using html and css. It has been through many modifications throughout the years as more projects have been added on. Originally, I started it just to show my art portfolio in high school, but now it has developed into something more to describe me as a whole.
It includes my resume, github account, linkedin, and instagram that you can see on the left side bar when you click the pdf icon, some of my art pieces (scroll down), and much more!
I have been playing piano since I was five years old. I like to play whenever I'm tired to release the stress.
See MoreI first encountered computer science when I was in tenth grade when I took a college Python course.
See MoreI really loved watching cooking videos as a child and as I got older, I began actually following recipes.
As a kid, I doodled on any paper I could find. I've gotten it under control, but I still enjoy drawing.
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