HI! I'm Gerard

problem solver, analytical thinker and mathematic enthusiastic

About

I'm a learner, a passionately curious person, a risk-taker, a programmer, an avid reader, I like minimalist design, and I'm a student. I love to learn.

I've been programming for almost 4 years now, I'd rather call myself a problem-solver or an analytical thinker (as you've seen) but if you prefer a more "formal" role, consider me a Data Scientist.

I have experience in Web Development as well as in Data Science and Machine Learning. Right now, I'm focused on learning the latter, discovering the best ways to analyze data in order to get actionable insights and developing Machine Learning Models to make data-driven predictions.

Experience

Experience

Barcelona - June 2024/Aug 2024

Math + CS Tutor for College Students

September 2024 - Present

SKILLS

SKILLS

Python Programming

2021

Pandas, Seaborn and Matplotlib for Data Visualitzation

2022

SkLearn for Machine Learning Models

2022

R (Programming Language)

2023

BeautifulSoup for Web Scrapping

2023

NLTK for Sentimental Analysys

2023

Prophet and yfinance for Financial Data Analysis and Forecasting

2023

Streamlit for Interactive Data Visualization and User Interface

SkLearn for

Machine Learning

Models

2023

Some projects

Some projects

Working on: Recommendation System, Extensive Walmart Sales Analysis

and Quantitative Finance Projects (like Greeks and Black Scholes)

2024

CONTACT

Ready to bring your vision to life or just want to chat? Reach out, and let's create something memorable together.

I'm here to listen, collaborate, and craft design solutions that resonate. Check my LinkedIn or email me!

My Bookshelf

“Reading is my favorite habit. This has been so far the only activity where I see my curiosity fulfilled"

-Gerard

Business Adventures - John Brooks

The best (real)tales I've read to learn how business works and what makes a company successful.

Sapiens - Yuval Noah Harari

This book makes you think and grow. It makes you question literally everything. Like Bill Gates said, "I would recommend this to anyone". For me, Sapiens is a MUST.

Brief Answers to the Big Questions - Stephen Hawking

This book is kinda special to me. I read it when I was 14. My curiosity was satisfied for the first time ever.

ORIGINALS - Adam Grant

How Non-Conformists Change The World. I loved this book, it's so inspiring, from entrepreneurs to activists for women's rights. I think we should all try to do things like an Original.

Homo Deus - Yuval Noah Harari

Gotta say it's a bit scary reading everything that we're close too and can happen in just 5 to 10 years. It's mind-blowing.

A Short History Of Nearly Everything - Bill Bryson

This is awesome for any curious person. A journey through every science that leaves you with complete curiosity satisfaction

I Don't Want To Grow Up - Scott Stillman

Loved how flexible and true to himself this guy is. A great book to read from time to time and see if you still HAVEN'T grown up.

Net Positive - Paul Polman and Andrew Winston

I admire the way Paul runs his company and Andrew insights are awesome. Everyone should aspire to have a net positive company.

Hyperfocus - Chris Bailey

Now Reading…

Anything You Want - Derek Sivers

This guy's next level. He is not exactly the model entrepreneur, he's actually a musician, he just learns and then sells stuff, I'd recommend this to anyone.

Astrophysics For People In A Hurry - Neil deGrasse Tyson

It does really explain Astrophysics plain, simple and fast. Also, understandable for anyone.

Netflix: No Rules Rules - Reed Hastings and Erin Meyer

I liked how Reed and Erin worked together to write this book. The Netflix Culture really inspires you to try and work at a place that you feel matches your energy and philosophy.

Zero To One - Peter Thield with Blake Masters

Key for Building Successful Start-Up. Peter Thiel makes (in my opinion) some pretty great explanations not that common in entrepreneurship books, in order to build the future.

A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking

The idea of how relative time is amazes me.

Good Economics for Hard Times - Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo

These two guys really make a good effort to try and write an economics book that everyone can read. The Economy Nobel Prize Winners give their views on the biggest problems facing society nowadays.

Rich Dad Poor Dad - Robert Kiyosaki

Basic Financial Knowledge. I recommend this to literally any person.

Animal Farm - George Orwell

I don't usually read novels, but Orwell makes a pretty good story here. I really like how he shows a real world situation through an Animal Farm.

7 Habits of Highly Effective People - Stephen R. Covey

This book actually made me start reading as a serious habit, it's great, and it may be more psychological than you'd think.

Emotional Intelligence - Daniel Goleman

Understanding your emotions should always be first on your list. Goleman makes some good points about how EQ is truly important for basically every aspect of our lifes.

The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari - Robin Sharma

Seeing someone as successful as this guy change his life this way makes you re-think a lot.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - Mark Twain

I loved this book, a little kid getting into trouble is just so addicting to me.

FOUR: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Google Facebook and Apple - Scot Galloway

I enjoyed getting to know all this stuff from companies whose products I use in a daily basis. Great Book, Great Author.

The Internet of Money - Andreas Antonopoulos

I was curious about Blockchain and I bought this. It's nice since it's not really hard to understand because it's combination of speeches and talks.

Einstein's Biography - Walter Isaacson

Einstein's mind is something that I will always admire and wonder about. Walter makes the best biographies.

100 Things About Physics and Quantum Mechanics - Joanne Baker

The way this book is structured is awesome, the graphics, the drawings, it's very well done.

The Theory of Everything - Stephen Hawing

I just love Hawking. A way to get a grasp of how difficult it is to combine Relativity and Quantum Mechanics.

How to Avoid a Climate Disaster - Bill Gates

We should all read this and understand the situation the whole world is in and what we can do about it.

Elegant Universe - Brian Greene

700 pages of string theory, awesome. Gotta like it, tho. Physics fascinates me honestly.

Steve Jobs: The Illustrated Biography - Jessie Hartland

I started liking everything I like because of this book and this guy. Read it when I was 7. Give it to your kid, he'll love it.

The Economy of Natural Intelligence - Xavier Sala i Martín

An economical Sapiens version. I'm quite a fan of this Catalan Economist (Columbia Professor)