Bruno Oberle has a diverse work experience in various fields and roles. Bruno started their career as a Developer and Annotator at Lilpa Laboratory, Research Unit 1339, Strasbourg University, where they worked on a project for the French National Research Agency. Bruno developed a web application for corpus annotation and organized training sessions.
Bruno then worked at the Faculty of Literature, University of Strasbourg as a Teaching Assistant in Linguistics, teaching various linguistic topics to bachelor students. Simultaneously, they worked as a Computational Linguist at the University of Strasbourg, focusing on Natural Language Processing projects and statistical and linguistic analysis of coreference data. Bruno developed programs using Python and Java and published scientific papers in the field.
As they continued their academic journey, Bruno joined the Faculty of Languages, University of Strasbourg as a Teaching Assistant in Language Technologies, where they assisted Master's degree students in their studies.
In 2020, Bruno joined COGICEO as a Python and Web Developer, where they developed SaaS applications using Python, JavaScript, PostgreSQL, and frameworks like Flask and Bottle. Bruno also handled various back-end and front-end tasks, including workflow management systems, interactive maps, and dashboard development. Bruno was involved in automated integration tests, project management, and code base maintenance.
Most recently, Bruno joined Mantra.ms as a Python Developer in 2022.
Bruno Oberle studied at the University of Strasbourg from 2003 to 2005, where they earned a DEUG (Diplôme d'Études Universitaires Générales) in Philosophy. Bruno then pursued their Bachelor's degree at the same university from 2012 to 2015, specializing in Classics and Classical Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics. In 2012, they also studied Modern Greek Language and Civilization at the University of Strasbourg. Continuing their education at the University of Strasbourg, they obtained two Master's degrees - one in Linguistics from 2015 to 2017, and another in Language Technologies from 2016 to 2017.
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