Power Management Silicon Validation Engineer

Job updated about 3 hours ago
The employer was active 2 months ago

Job Description

Google welcomes people with disabilities.


Note: By applying to this position you will have an opportunity to share your preferred working location from the following: New Taipei, Banqiao District, New Taipei City, Taiwan; Zhubei, Zhubei City, Hsinchu County, Taiwan.

Minimum qualifications:

  • Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering, a related field, or equivalent practical experience.
  • 3 years of experience developing random stress tests, silicon validation frameworks, or related infrastructure.
  • Experience programming in C/C++.
  • Experience in Advanced RISC Machines (ARM) architecture and in IP level power management, Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS), or SoC/CPU/memory power management.

Preferred qualifications:

  • Experience executing tests on emulation platforms or Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) and with board level debug.
  • Experience with complex system debug, embedded operating systems, and bare metal programming.
  • Experience with JTAG debuggers (e.g., Lauterbach).
  • Knowledge of low power design and architecture techniques.
  • Knowledge of operating system fundamentals.
  • Familiarity with Power Management Integrated Circuit (PMIC) and power modeling techniques.

About the job

Google engineers develop the next-generation technologies that change how users connect, explore, and interact with information and one another. As a member of an extraordinarily creative, motivated and talented team, you develop new products that are used by millions of people. We need our engineers to be versatile and passionate to take on new problems as we continue to push technology forward. If you get excited about building new things and working across discipline lines, then our team might be your next career step.

In this role, you will be a part of Google’s Silicon team, working to enable Google’s continuous innovations. You'll be responsible for bare-metal and operating system based validation, including both pre-silicon verification and post-silicon bring-up and validation, ensuring the delivery of high-quality silicon.

Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful. Our team combines the best of Google AI, Software, and Hardware to create radically helpful experiences. We research, design, and develop new technologies and hardware to make computing faster, seamless, and more powerful. We aim to make people's lives better through technology.

Responsibilities

  • Plan, develop, and execute tests to validate IP, subsystem, and system level power management.
  • Manage power correlation and power management design validation on pre-silicon and post-silicon platforms.
  • Interface with Software, Architecture, Design, and Design Verification teams to create and execute test plans
  • Support silicon debug and field failures.
Google is proud to be an equal opportunity workplace and is an affirmative action employer. We are committed to equal employment opportunity regardless of race, color, ancestry, religion, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, age, citizenship, marital status, disability, gender identity or Veteran status. We also consider qualified applicants regardless of criminal histories, consistent with legal requirements. See also Google's EEO Policy and EEO is the Law. If you have a disability or special need that requires accommodation, please let us know by completing our Accommodations for Applicants form.
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About us

Google’s mission is to organize the world‘s information and make it universally accessible and useful.

Since our founding in 1998, Google has grown by leaps and bounds. From offering search in a single language we now offer dozens of products and services—including various forms of advertising and web applications for all kinds of tasks—in scores of languages. And starting from two computer science students in a university dorm room, we now have thousands of employees and offices around the world. A lot has changed since the first Google search engine appeared. But some things haven’t changed: our dedication to our users and our belief in the possibilities of the Internet itself.