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by stevekemp
3071 days ago
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Your advert sounds pretty awesome, I used to do a lot of low-level coding back in the day (first z80, then intel), and now I'm rediscovering my love after starting to develop hardware-based projects with Arduinos and ESP8266 devices. One thing that jumps out is that I know many of the tools you list, but I'm basically AVR + Intel these days, so seeing all the architectures listed is a bit overwhelming. When I see posts like that though I always imagine it comes down to location and salary. For the right price many people would move, if they're not local. I've seen too many adverts where people want the kind of skills you'd learn over 20+ years of industry employment, with a salary a teenager could live off, and its not too hard to understand why the same jobs get posted year-in, year-out. (Not that I'm accusing you of that, but it's a slippery slope, and filling "impossible" jobs gets easier every time you increment the salary.) |
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Hmmm. Maybe I'm scaring people off.
For example, we'd hire somebody who is fully focused on x86 if they are good at that. The sort of level we'd be looking for is a person who can recognize the common string.h functions in bare x86 assembly code.
The Arduino usually uses a ATmega8 CPU. I just encountered that CPU, not in an Arduino, and might soon be dealing with it. Adaptability is really desirable; this is a CPU that I've never dealt with before and I'm not about to wimp out.
The ESP8266 has a core based on the Tensilica Xtensa, which I've dealt with.
I think I heard somebody around the office dealing with a Z80, but I'm not sure if I remember that right. Chances are, we've done Z80 work.
It's kind of fun to encounter a new CPU. It's especially neat to encounter one for which step 1 is to write a disassembler.
I certainly do post the same jobs year-in, year-out. That doesn't mean we got nobody. We need more than one person.
Lots of people really won't move. Maybe for a $million they would... but only "maybe"! It is particularly hard to convince people on the west coast that there is civilization elsewhere. There is a fear of being stuck if the job doesn't work out, yet here I am in a city with at least half a dozen large defense contractors and a whole bunch of cyberwar-related startup companies and even some space program work.