Kim Ferrari is a Robotics System Integrator with a PhD in Neuroscience and a decade of experience translating scientific rigor into reliable embedded and IoT products. Starting as a biologist, Kim built open-source microscopy toolboxes and whole-system lab instrumentation before moving into industry to design battery-powered preclinical monitors and automation for additive manufacturing. Proficient in Embedded Linux, C, Python, and CI/CD, they bridge hardware, firmware, and full-stack software to deliver connected robotics and inspection systems. Based in Zurich, Kim thrives taking ownership of complex integrations—combining neuroscience-grade measurement sensitivity with production-grade reliability—and has a track record of turning research prototypes into manufacturable solutions.
10 years of coding experience
5 years of employment as a software developer
Phd Neuroscience, Phd Neuroscience at University of Zurich
CHIPS, or Cellular and Hemodynamic Image Processing Suite, is an open-source MATLAB toolbox designed to analyse functional images of cells and blood vessels, primarily from two-photon microscopy. Please see the README file, which is displayed at the bottom of this page, for more information.
Contributions:1 release, 7 PRs, 33 pushes in 4 years 3 months
Contributions:25 commits, 8 PRs, 14 pushes in 2 years 10 months
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