I grew up in Elche, studied Computer Engineering at the Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, and somewhere along the way I realized that the most interesting problems live where software meets the human body.
I built a system that lets you turn on a light bulb with your mind and demonstrated it live on national television. I have also been a TEDx speaker.
Today I work as a Principal Web Engineer at Facephi, but my nights and weekends belong to neuroscience, biotechnology, and artificial intelligence. I understand systems from first principles before writing a single line of code, because I see software as a conversation, not a monologue.
Right now, something ambitious is taking shape from the foundations of NeuralAnalytics. Stay tuned.
Biotechnology and Neuroscience
- NeuralAnalytics -- My bachelor's thesis at UPV. I built a brain-computer interface prototype that uses neural networks to process raw EEG signals from an electrode headband, letting me turn a light bulb on and off with thought alone. Featured in El Espanol and demonstrated live on national television.
Deep Learning and GPU Acceleration
- ElectricalGridPredictor -- A precursor to my thesis where I taught myself LSTMs by building a time-series forecasting model for electrical grid outputs.
- PathWalker -- I wanted to learn GPU-accelerated computing, so I wrote a pathfinding engine in OpenCL. My NVIDIA card burned out shortly after. Coincidence, probably.
Large Language Models
- OpenLobster -- My friends and I tried OpenClaw and found it fell short of our needs. So I built an opinionated version that actually works for us.
Operating Systems and Architectures
- FreeNOS -- A fork of a minimal POSIX-based OS built for learning OS fundamentals. I pulled it from Google Source Code, gave it visibility, and kept supporting the original author's work.





