Looking for an intern to play with a Linux-powered robot fleet
Greg Rundlett (freephile)
greg at freephile.com
Fri Jul 31 15:17:38 EDT 2015
Is this an unpaid internship?
Greg Rundlett
https://eQuality-Tech.com
https://freephile.org
On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 1:15 AM, Joshua Judson Rosen <rozzin at hackerposse.com
> wrote:
> Guys,
>
> I'm currently looking for an intern to come play with my company's
> Linux-powered
> autonomous robot fleet this summer: Harvest Automation <
> http://www.harvestai.com>
> is looking to give one bright individual some industrial experience that
> includes:
>
> * Working with actual robots, simulations, testers, operations
> people,
> and developers to help solve issues in the application, network,
> and operating environments.
>
> * Creating test plans, test cases, and conditions for testing of
> the robot software (both on actual hardware, running around in
> the real world, and in simulation) from information in
> specifications,
> feature descriptions, or bug-reports.
>
> * Creation of test cases that address software scenarios, system
> testing, regression testing, negative testing, error or defect
> retest, performance monitoring and usability
>
> * Reproducing and resolving software issues with the database,
> UI, or communication protocol
>
> * Implementing a software solution from a requirement
> description within the code base using the database, UI, or
> communication protocol
>
> * Updating test results and requirement descriptions in
> our issue-tracker
>
> * Assisting in system set-up and software installation
>
> * Assisting in the installation/configuration of re-creations
> of the software production environments
>
> We're in Billerica, MA (~14 miles south of Nashua).
>
> We're really hoping to find someone who's already got a reasonably
> good grasp on what software-development entails; my boss has been
> recruit from the college CS programs around Boston, and is expecting
> to find someone working on a Master's CS Degree; I suspect that
> we'd do well to open up the search a bit--that there's probably
> someone on the list either who knows someone in college or high school
> (or *whatever*) who's already savvy enough to have read some of
> the more interesting compsci literature on their own, spent some time
> hacking on open-source projects, and even has some code/patchsets
> associated with a github/launchpad/ohloh/openhub/sourceforge/whatever
> account that they could show along with trails through mailing lists
> and public bug-trackers..., or who _is_ such a person themselves.
>
> I'd like to hear from those people.
>
> Experience with C++ and Python are pluses (and if you're savvy enough
> to grok things metaclasses, that's probably a big plus). If you know
> C# or Java, that's OK too. You'll need to have some background
> somewhere in there.
>
> Knowing SQL is a plus.
>
> If you've ever programmed with a video game engine, that's a plus.
>
> Understanding of network architectures and how Wi-Fi actually works
> is a plus.
>
> --
> "Don't be afraid to ask (λf.((λx.xx) (λr.f(rr))))."
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