Science Journal is a seasoned software engineer with over two decades of experience building scalable, secure enterprise and consumer systems at top technology firms including Apple, Google, IBM, Microsoft, and Oracle. He brings deep expertise in Java/JEE, Spring, microservices, SOAP/REST APIs, and AWS (including advanced services like KMS, CloudHSM and DynamoDB), alongside strong database and design-pattern fluency. Currently based in San Jose, he combines production-support rigor with Agile delivery, CI/CD and infrastructure-as-code practices. An active contributor to the popular Google Science Journal Android project, he has hands-on mobile experience integrating device sensors and audio processing into educational apps. He holds advanced degrees in computer science from Harvard and MIT, blending academic depth with practical engineering at scale. Colleagues describe him as a pragmatic architect who turns complex system requirements into maintainable, well-instrumented solutions.
8 years of coding experience
11 years of employment as a software developer
Master's degree, Computer Science, Master's degree, Computer Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Licentiate degree, Computer Science, Licentiate degree, Computer Science at University of Oxford
Doctorate, Computer Science, Doctorate, Computer Science at Harvard University
Use the sensors in your mobile devices to perform science experiments. Science doesn’t just happen in the classroom or lab—tools like Science Journal let you see how the world works with just your phone.
Role in this project:
Mobile Developer (Android)
Contributions:113 commits, 5 pushes in 1 year 6 months
Contributions summary:Science primarily contributed to the Android mobile application, focusing on implementing UI elements and features related to sensors. The user's commits add strings for undo snackbars, modify Java code to interact with Android's audio APIs and JSyn for audio processing and added support for a new sound frequency sensor. Further, they modified various fragment layouts and UI elements. The user also implemented features to take snapshots using the sensor.
Use the sensors in your mobile devices to perform science experiments. Science doesn’t just happen in the classroom or lab—tools like Science Journal let you see how the world works with just your phone.
Contributions:1 commit, 27 PRs, 219 pushes in 1 day
phonesciencesensorsjournallet
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.