Software Engineer Iii, Ai/ml, Platforms and Devices

Google Google · Big Tech · Mountain View, CA +1

Software Engineer III role focused on AI/ML within Google's Platforms and Devices team. The role involves writing product/system development code, collaborating on design and code reviews, contributing to documentation, triaging and debugging issues, and implementing solutions in specialized ML areas. Key responsibilities include utilizing ML infrastructure, contributing to model optimization, and data processing. Minimum qualifications include programming experience in Python/C++ and experience with speech/audio, reinforcement learning, ML infrastructure, or other ML fields, along with ML infrastructure experience.

What you'd actually do

  1. Write product or system development code.
  2. Collaborate with peers and stakeholders through design and code reviews to ensure best practices amongst available technologies (e.g., style guidelines, checking code in, accuracy, testability, and efficiency).
  3. Contribute to existing documentation or educational content and adapt content based on product/program updates and user feedback.
  4. Triage product or system issues and debug/track/resolve by analyzing the sources of issues and the impact on hardware, network, or service operations and quality.
  5. Implement solutions in one or more specialized ML areas, utilize ML infrastructure, and contribute to model optimization and data processing.

Skills

Required

  • Python
  • C++
  • speech/audio
  • reinforcement learning
  • ML infrastructure
  • model deployment
  • model evaluation
  • optimization
  • data processing
  • debugging

Nice to have

  • Master's degree
  • PhD
  • Computer Science
  • data structures
  • algorithms
  • Android development
  • accessible technologies

What the JD emphasized

  • ML infrastructure
  • model optimization
  • data processing
  • speech/audio
  • reinforcement learning

Other signals

  • ML infrastructure
  • model optimization
  • data processing
  • speech/audio
  • reinforcement learning