I work in the Solaris Kernel Development group, and we're always looking for extremely bright people that are passionate about doing kernel development. We have some very challenging problems to solve, we have a world-class team of engineers, and we work on (IMHO) a terrific product. No, it's not Linux, but it's definitely UNIX.
Our group recruits actively at a small handful of schools (only so many hours in the year, y'know), but we're willing to consider anyone with the right background. We had three interns last summer; we'll probably aim to get two or three this year. Of course, we're always looking for qualified full-time hires too.
I work in the Solaris Kernel Development group, and we're always looking for extremely bright people that are passionate about doing kernel development. We have some very challenging problems to solve, we have a world-class team of engineers, and we work on (IMHO) a terrific product. No, it's not Linux, but it's definitely UNIX.
Our group recruits actively at a small handful of schools (only so many hours in the year, y'know), but we're willing to consider anyone with the right background. We had three interns last summer; we'll probably aim to get two or three this year. Of course, we're always looking for qualified full-time hires too.
If this sounds interesting, drop me an e-mail.
That was the first thing I thought of when I read that headline. It was a pretty impressive machine for its time.
Ah, for the days when gatekeeper.dec.com was *the* place to find things...