Alex Okorokov - Motorbiker, Android Dev & Fixer
imito AG
Planifier une démo
iconHamburger
icon-cross
Produits
imitoCam app icon
imitoCam
Documentation médicale photo et vidéo
imitoWound app icon
imitoWound
Documentation et mesure des plaies avec l'IA
WoundGenius App Icon
WoundGenius
Mesure de la plaie à l'essai
imitoScan
Scanner les documents des patients

Cas d'utilisation
Photo et vidéo-documentation médicale
Obtenir une seconde opinion
Recherche et enseignement
Numériser des documents
Intégration DPI, DMS et PACS
Documentation de plaie

Recherche
Société
Références et partenaires
A propos d'imito
Notre histoire
Évènements
Offres d’emploi

Ressources
Études scientifiques
Actualités
Revue de presse

Meet us on December 4 and 5 at our booth 24 together with our partner MESI Medical at the Nuremberg Wound Congress and book an appointment with us directly.

imito AG
Planifier une démo
iconHamburger
Alex Okorokov - Motorbiker, Android Dev & Fixer
24 novembre 20259 min à lire
Alex Okorokov - Motorbiker, Android Dev & Fixer

He has been around since the very early days of imito, built our very first apps, and keeps fixing them to this day. We have been able to count on Alex and his Android skills for nine years now, even though he regularly risks his health jumping over hills.

Alex, what is the true story - how did you end up at imito nine years ago?

Eugene and I did our master’s degree in Computer Science together in Kharkiv. Back in 2016, Chrysanth and Manuel first hired Eugene to develop an iOS app for them, and 10 months later Eugene told me they also needed an Android developer like me.

As a first task, they asked me to create an initial version of imitoMeasure (now Wound Genius). It was the first app that imito ever put out into the world, and I got it done in 4 weeks. Shortly after, imitoCam was created.

© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger

App development back then must have been much more difficult?

Yes, for example, for the new WoundGenius app, we have a much better base architecture in place than it was in imitoMeasure, which makes it easier and quicker for us to change and adapt to what users need. Also, AI helps nowadays. Currently, I use Grok a lot, ChatGPT of course, and a bit of DeepSeek like Manuel.

AI not only for medical photography © Canva / pexels

I remember that I first used ChatGPT because I wanted to see the answer to a meme going around on the internet: how you could possibly tell your father that you want to become a police officer while your father has recently been in prison. That was my ChatGPT moment, when I saw it making up smart phrases on how to best tell your father some tricky news. Now, I use AI for a lot of things besides jokes.

© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger

Do you also remember one of your first computer moments as a child?

I believe my father bought the first computer for me when I was 15. I used to play video games back then, and I remember realising that a game is actually just a folder full of files.

© Canva / vectplus

So I saw an opportunity to customise my players in the video game a bit. For example, I would get some files from the internet and use them to replace the default game files. This gave my tools in the game a special, different look compared to what the original developers set as default.

As a first step in your professional developer career, you worked on a video communication tool for the deaf?

Yes, that tool is still on the market and is owned by a big US company called Purple. They create hardware and software for deaf people. One piece of software I developed for them was used by deaf people, for example, when they went to the dentist, but the dentist didn’t know sign language. The deaf person would open the app, record what they wanted to communicate in sign language on video, and a real interpreter from Purple would join the call and explain the details to the non-deaf doctor.

© Canva / pixelshot

Did you ever want to become a doctor yourself?

I always found it really interesting, and I guess I would choose to be a surgeon, because surgery can fix something immediately. We have a big war going on in Ukraine nowadays that causes so many injuries, so surgeons are desperately needed.

© Canva / tunaru-dorins-images

How much do you hear about the impact your developments at imito have on medical professionals in everyday life?

I do hear about it. Anastasiya & Co are doing a good job of keeping us in the loop, and every now and then I jump on a call with a customer. I also like seeing the case study videos, where real people talk about how they use the apps.

And I know that the initial reason why imito was created was because of what Chrysanth and Manuel actually saw happening at the hospitals: doctors were sending pictures of wounds and patient information via WhatsApp to their colleagues. This is obviously prohibited, and we solved that with imitoCam & Co. So I’m quite happy to know that what we do is valuable, that we are still going, and that we’ve proved our place over the years.

Who from the imito team are you now working with every day?

I guess mostly with our Product Owner Anastasiya. She helps us developers a lot to understand what’s going on. I don’t need meetings if I have Anastasiya, because she resolves a lot of issues for me. She prepares the task board and communicates with Chrysanth and Carsten from the Business Development Team. As a result we have a strict plan with tasks that we try to complete on time.

© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger

Did you ever build an app for yourself?

Yes, I once built an app to use myself and for other people like me who wanted to keep track of their car expenses. I could record how much money I spent on washing it, fuelling it, or repairing it. The app showed statistics of how much money I spent during the last year, month, or day.

© Canva / pexels

I used it, but also 30,000 other people in Ukraine. I actually would like to build another app - I have a few ideas, but I’m not sure if I have the power for this. And the free time.

Do you also enjoy fixing physical things as much as fixing digital apps?

I have a car and two motorbikes, and I'm super interested in understanding and fixing their parts, but I don’t have enough time to play with them more.

To be precise, I have two off-road motorbikes, and I enjoy jumping over big hills on them, so that it feels like my heart is jumping out of my body. My bikes weigh around 160 kg, and last time I fell from one 15 times in just an hour. Usually some small parts of the bike break, so it’s a crazy, traumatic sport with lots of expenses to keep track of, but I enjoy it.

© Canva / pixabay

Lastly - did you ever think about who you admire in the world, and is it a motorbiker or a surgeon?

I would say the first person I think of is the grandfather of one of my friends. He is 84, still goes climbing, and does running competitions in Andorra. I admire him a lot for his fitness at that age, but also for what he has done in life.

He’s Ukrainian, now lives in Germany in Düsseldorf, but spent most of his life living in the USSR. That meant that until he was about 55, there was no option for him to do private entrepreneurship. But after these restrictions were lifted, he managed to start living his best life and pivoted from being a university teacher to founding his own medical hardware company in the cardiology space. So he is an example for me of a man that I admire.

© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger

All that made him quite rich - he has a couple of cars, has built a beautiful house, and he travels quite often. But he still finds time to volunteer: every month he drives some old cars from Düsseldorf to Kharkiv, just so that they can be used at our frontline. To do all that at 84, you need to be in really good physical condition, and I admire him a ton for that.

So you know exactly what kind of person you will be at 84?

Oh, I'm not too sure. You need to be really disciplined to be that fit at 84. I sit all week, then jump on my motorbike over hills and it flies over my head. I guess that isn’t helping my health - it could rather break it. But I enjoy doing it.

© Canva / pixabay

Thank you Alex, that we could count on you during the last nine years to fix our Android apps whenever something broke. We want to keep running with you for many more years to come, so please take it easy with the hills.

imito AG
Ⓒ imito AG 2016–2025