A coreboot@coreboot.org subscriber wrote:
]Hi Scott, ] ]It appears they are looking for a full-time position. If they were ]willing to outsource, I would be interested.
It might be useful to apply anyway. Others have pointed out that most of the coreboot experts are located in Europe. If a few engineers from remote or non-US locations responded, it might get the hiring manager interested.
I point out this job offer because the recent Intel coreboot openings are unique in an important aspect. Today, a BIOS engineer who wants the security, pay and other benefits of working for a major computer OEM must learn to be happy living in the world of UEFI, including its rules, regulations, mandates, laws, restrictions, enforcements, and "coding standard". Want to use features of C99? Sorry, Microsoft doesn't support that. Want to use static functions? Sorry, those are banned. Want to use a comma operator? Sorry, forbidden. Want to start a local variable name with a lower case letter? Sorry, prohibited. Want to write ugly code full of dangerous type casts, spaghetti gotos, and countless global variables? You're in luck. Today, the Intel coreboot openings are the only non-UEFI BIOS jobs that I know of.
Thanks, Scott
]On 06/19/2014 08:11 PM, Scott Duplichan wrote: ]> Scott Duplichan [mailto:scott@notabs.org] wrote: ]> ]> ]Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2014 08:37 AM ]> ]To: 'coreboot@coreboot.org' ]> ]Subject: coreboot engineer needed ]> ] ]> ] ]> ]https://intel.taleo.net/careersection/10000/jobdetail.ftl?job=725464 ]> ] ]> ]Thanks, ]> ]Scott ]> ]> https://intel.taleo.net/careersection/10000/jobdetail.ftl?%5Djob=737461&... ]> ]> "Coreboot BIOS development for Chrome OS" ]> ]> Thanks, ]> Scott