Senior Software Engineer, Vision, Camera and Imaging, Xr

Google Google · Big Tech · San Jose, CA +1

Senior Software Engineer role focused on developing full-stack vision, camera, and imaging solutions for XR devices, optimizing for quality, latency, and power. The role involves evaluating and developing technologies, collaborating with cross-functional teams and Google Research, and applying computer vision algorithms and ML perception towards product development.

What you'd actually do

  1. Work as a member of a cross-organizational multi-disciplinary team developing full stack vision and imaging/camera solutions for XR devices.
  2. Optimize across the software layers in tuning quality, latency, and power efficiency.
  3. Evaluate and develop technologies and their product application to shape next generation product features, specifications, and system architecture.
  4. Collaborate cross-functionally with UX, product, physical design, and market research in both design and engineering, to progress solutions from investigation to shipping product.
  5. Work beyond organization in collaboration with Google Research, Android, and external partner teams to develop and leverage advanced technologies to deliver high quality solutions.

Skills

Required

  • C++
  • Java
  • Software development
  • Imaging-related domain
  • Image processing
  • Computer vision
  • Computational photography
  • Implementing image processing pipelines
  • Managing concurrency for mobile features

Nice to have

  • Master’s degree or PhD in Computer Science or related technical field
  • Data structures and algorithms
  • Applying computer vision algorithms and ML perception toward product
  • Computational camera/imaging/photography concepts and algorithms
  • Developing for mobile devices
  • Managing compute, power, and latency

What the JD emphasized

  • Experience applying computer vision algorithms and ML perception toward product.

Other signals

  • AI/ML for XR devices
  • Computer Vision
  • Image Processing
  • Full Stack Development