National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC) | Software, MachineLearning, Computer Vision, Simulation, IT | Pittsburgh, PA, USA | Full Time | ONSITE, Hybrid | H1-B VISA
Featured Openings: Robotics Engineer - Mobile Robotics (https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/robotics-engineer-mobile...)
Software Engineer (https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/software-engineer.html)
DevOps Engineer (https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/devops-engineer.html)
Robotics Engineer - Autonomous Aerial Vehicles (https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/robotics-engineer-aav.ht...)
Software Team Lead (https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/software-team-lead.html)
Explore All Current Positions: https://www.nrec.ri.cmu.edu/careers/index.html
NREC, a robotics research and development powerhouse, is looking for experienced developers, especially in embedded systems, robotics, perception, deep learning, data science, and AI. For more than 25 years NREC has brought together a critical mass of software and hardware engineers to take technology from the laboratory to the real world. NREC maintains a diverse portfolio of projects, from Augmented Reality driver assistance to full off-road autonomy and from advanced teleoperation to full autonomous manipulation. We are part of the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, focused on commercialization of robotic technologies, and employ 160 people in our off-campus facility.
Questions about NREC? Interested in a position? Contact one of our recruiters Nuvia Nishad (nnishad@nrec.ri.cmu.edu) or Christine DeCarolis (cdecarolis@nrec.ri.cmu.edu) and please mention Hacker News.
Carnegie Mellon University’s Print & Probability Project | Digital Humanities Research Programmer | Pittsburgh, PA/REMOTE (if resident in certain states) | http://bookhistory.rocks/ | https://hackmd.io/@cwarren/rJ6ex7S8h
We are a team of book historians, statisticians, computer scientists, and librarians who tackle mysteries by modeling the material conditions of early modern print shops. We work at the intersection of book history, computer vision, and machine learning to discover letterpress printers whose identities have eluded scholars for several hundred years.
We're seeking a highly motivated Digital Humanities Research Programmer to work on our interdisciplinary Freedom and the Press before Freedom of the Press project. You will be a key player as we answer the question: who dunnit?
OPEN POSITION:
Digital Humanities Research Programmer - https://hackmd.io/8NbYYNQgQw6MLwBI7MsZvA?view