About
I was born in Sanremo and lived there until I was nineteen. Since childhood I’ve always had a strong creative drive and a natural curiosity about how things work. I used to take apart toys and hardware devices just to rebuild them in different ways, often inspired by things I found online. Creating, understanding, and improving things has always been the way I approach the world.
After graduating from the Cassini language high school, I moved to Turin to study at the Politecnico di Torino. At first I enrolled in Aerospace Engineering, with the dream of becoming an astronaut. During my first year, however, I discovered a much deeper passion for computer science subjects and decided to change direction, switching to Computer Engineering.
The transition wasn’t easy. I came from a linguistic background, and the first years were particularly demanding. It was a shock to realize that the level required was much higher than what I had been used to. Around the same time, COVID arrived, forcing me to spend a large part of my university experience in isolation. Looking back, that period became a turning point: I learned how to build a solid method of studying and working, based on discipline, consistency, and problem solving.
It was during those years that I started writing my first software. One episode in particular had a strong impact on my path. To access the university study rooms, students had to book a spot online during a very short time window. I decided to develop a small piece of software that would automate the booking process. That was the first time I truly experienced the real power of code: solving a concrete problem starting from nothing more than a computer in my room.
After completing my bachelor’s degree, I continued with a master’s degree in Computer Engineering, specializing in Artificial Intelligence and Data Analytics. If the bachelor’s degree shaped my mindset—teaching me not to give up, to face complex problems, and to build a method—the master’s program was when I developed high-level engineering skills and truly learned how to do what I do today.
During this time I worked on several projects within large teams, facing for the first time the complexity of collaborative work, shared responsibility, and pursuing common goals. I have always had a natural inclination toward leadership—not because of a need to stand out, but because of the desire to motivate the people around me and bring out the best in the group, and indirectly in myself as well.
After finishing my studies, I decided to pursue a professional path that would allow me to express creativity, initiative, and autonomy freely, constantly challenging myself through real projects and practical problems.
Outside of work, I strongly believe in the balance between mind and body. I train regularly because I think a clear mind needs a strong body. I love surfing, a passion I discovered a few years ago. Having grown up in a seaside town, it quickly became a fundamental part of my life. If you can’t find me in front of a computer and there are waves, I’m probably at the beach with my board.
I’m a positive, curious, and determined person. Sometimes stubborn too—a flaw, perhaps, but often also the reason why I pursue what I believe in all the way to the end.