Lino Coria, Computer Vision Engineer, Transition Q&A

Lino Coria earned his PhD in electrical engineering from the University of British Columbia. He’s currently a computer vision engineer at Wiivv Wearables and partner at Scribble Consulting. Find him online at Scribble Consulting and follow him on social media @LinoCoria.

A person wearing blue glasses and a blue polo shirt with white stripes smiles at the camera against a plain white background.

I was a professor at the department of electronics, systems and informatics at ITESO University, a private university located in the Guadalajara Metropolitan area (Mexico). It was a job I truly enjoyed. Because of personal reasons, my wife and I decided that it was best for our family to relocate to Canada. I got a postdoc position at my old UBC lab.

I am a computer vision engineer at Wiivv Wearables. Wiivv is a bionics company that creates 3-D printed, custom gear using 3-D-mapping technology, accessible by everyone from a smartphone.

I was approached by a recruiter, asking me if I was interested in this job. At the time, I was working as a senior research engineer at another company.

Daily: I develop computer vision algorithms that analyze images in order to identify and measure human body parts. I also test the performance of these algorithms. I work closely with bio-mechanical, design, hardware, and software engineers.

Weekly or bi-weekly: I write reports that highlight the improvement of our algorithms. I do a live demo for everyone at the company showing what I have been working on.

I am surprised by how quickly I have been able to learn. The first two months were particularly tough as I had to learn to use some tools that were completely new to me. Now I feel very comfortable using them and can add that experience to my resume.

I like to discover elegant solutions to complicated problems. I cannot go into details but we were able to identify a novel way of solving one of our greatest challenges. It was a game changer.

I wish I had more time to play with new ideas. Everything I currently work on has an immediate application.

I am not sure. Technically, I want to get more experience with deep learning.

However, I am also very interested in education, storytelling and technology. I have been creating digital content for children that speak both English and Spanish, which is the case with my daughters. I would love to be able to continue exploring that and turn it into a successful business. This is the idea behind the company my wife and I have founded called Scribble Consulting.

  • Talk to a lot of people: invite them a cup of coffee and learn from their experience.
  • Be willing to change the way you do things if there is good evidence that doing so might bring benefits.
  • Build a (digital) portfolio of your work. Be ready to show it at any time.
  • Print business cards and have an up-to-date LinkedIn profile.
  • Take online courses if you realize there are some key skills that you need to master (I love Udacity, edX and Coursera).

You may be ready to join my PhD Career Clarity Program. Most people start with this free webinar.

For Professors, Postdocs, and Other Overworked, Underappreciated PhDs Ready to Change Careers
After this free 80-minute training you will know how to focus on what’s important instead of letting academia dictate your future; job search strategically without wasting time trying to follow advice that doesn’t apply; apply for the right jobs, ones that let you do what you love without burnout
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Something else on your mind? Email me at Jen@FromPhDtoLife.com