Google's software engineers develop next-generation technologies that change how billions of users connect, explore, and interact with information. Products need to handle information at massive scale, and extend well beyond web search. The Platforms and Devices team researches, designs, and develops new technologies to make user interaction with computing faster and more seamless, building innovative experiences for users around the world. This role will design and build critical infrastructure that empowers developers and shapes the future of gaming at Google.
Requirements
- 2 years of experience with software development in one or more programming languages (e.g., C-Sharp, Rust, C++, Java, Go, Python), or 1 year of experience with an advanced degree.
- 2 years of experience building developer tools (e.g., compilers, automated releases, code design and testing, test automation frameworks).
- Experience with development environments.
- Experience with game development, test automation, or CI/CD pipelines.
- Familiarity with building large-scale, distributed systems.
Responsibilities
- Write product or system development code.
- Participate in, or lead design reviews with peers and stakeholders to decide amongst available technologies.
- Review code developed by other developers and provide feedback to ensure best practices (e.g., style guidelines, checking code in, accuracy, testability, and efficiency).
- Contribute to existing documentation or educational content and adapt content based on product/program updates and user feedback.
- 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.
Other
- Bachelor’s degree or equivalent practical experience.
- Master's degree or PhD in Computer Science or related technical fields.
- Passion for gaming and improving the developer experience.
- Excellent problem-solving and communication skills.
- Versatile, display leadership qualities and be enthusiastic to take on new problems across the full-stack.