Senior Electronics Engineer

Oxford
11 months ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Technology Specialist - AI

Senior Data Scientist

Senior Data Scientist

Senior Machine Learning Engineer (Recommendation)

Senior RF Data Scientist / Research Engineer

Senior Machine Learning Engineer

Senior Electronics Engineer – Oxford – £55k - £65k – Semi Remote
Hexwired is recruiting for a pioneering R&D company with offices in Oxford now seeking a Senior Electronics Engineer with solid experience working on Sensing systems.
The company are rapidly expanding due to increased interest in their product range as well as developing bespoke solutions for customers. You will be working as part of a small, specialised team delivering complex solutions for various industries. The company are keen to find a Senior Electronics Engineer with previous experience working on High speed Electronics tech such as FPGA’s.
This is a Senior Electronics role that is semi remote with onsite work required 3 days a week.
Key Skills

  • Degree, MsC or PhD in Electronics, Embedded Systems or similar
  • 3+ years experience working on Mixed signal design
  • Solid PCB Design experience
  • Good experience working on FPGA based products, ideally with commercial FPGA design experience.
  • Any experience using VHDL is advantageous but not essential.
    The company are able to offer circa £55k - £65k dependent on experience along with an excellent benefits package including bonuses. If you’re interested in this Senior Electronics role, please apply.
    For more information on this role, or any other jobs across; Embedded, C++ programming, Embedded Linux, Mechanical, Python, Operations, Golang Development, Machine Learning, Electronics, FPGA, C#, Computer Vision, Data Science or Simulation contact us today

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Where to Advertise AI Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising AI jobs in the UK requires a different approach to most technical hiring. The candidate pool is small, highly informed and in demand across multiple sectors simultaneously. General job boards reach a broad audience but lack the specificity that AI professionals expect — and the filtering mechanisms they rely on. Specialist platforms, direct outreach and academic channels each serve a different part of the market. This guide, published by ArtificialIntelligenceJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise AI roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about time-to-hire across different role types.

New AI Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and Global Companies Reshaping AI Careers

The artificial intelligence job market in the UK is evolving at an extraordinary pace. With record-breaking investment, government backing, and a surge in enterprise adoption, the landscape of AI employers is shifting rapidly. For candidates exploring opportunities on ArtificialIntelligenceJobs.co.uk, understanding who is hiring next is just as important as understanding what skills are in demand. In this article, we explore the new and emerging AI employers to watch in 2026, focusing on organisations that have recently secured funding, won major contracts, or expanded their UK footprint. From cutting-edge startups to global giants doubling down on Britain, these companies represent the next wave of AI career opportunities.

How Many AI Tools Do You Need to Know to Get an AI Job?

If you are job hunting in AI right now it can feel like you are drowning in tools. Every week there is a new framework, a new “must-learn” platform or a new productivity app that everyone on LinkedIn seems to be using. The result is predictable: job seekers panic-learn a long list of tools without actually getting better at delivering outcomes. Here is the truth most hiring managers will quietly agree with. They do not hire you because you know 27 tools. They hire you because you can solve a problem, communicate trade-offs, ship something reliable and improve it with feedback. Tools matter, but only in service of outcomes. So how many AI tools do you actually need to know? For most AI job seekers: fewer than you think. You need a tight core toolkit plus a role-specific layer. Everything else is optional. This guide breaks it down clearly, gives you a simple framework to choose what to learn and shows you how to present your toolset on your CV, portfolio and interviews.