Full-Time

Uas – Software Engineer

Posted on 6/4/2025

Deadline 6/14/25
Airbus

Airbus

10,001+ employees

Manufactures aircraft, helicopters, and space systems

Compensation Overview

$95k - $154k/yr

+ Incentive Compensation + Profit Sharing + Employee Stock Ownership Plan

Senior

No H1B Sponsorship

The Dalles, OR, USA

Onsite: 100% - onsite in Bingen, Washington.

Category
Embedded Engineering
Software Engineering
Required Skills
Software Testing
Git
C#
JIRA
C/C++
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent industry experience.
  • 5 years experience in software development, design and engineering. (i.e., C++, C#)
  • Demonstrated expertise in understanding and documenting advanced technical, engineering, and scientific concepts.
  • Proven experience writing clean, maintainable, reusable code using engineering standard methodologies
  • Knowledge in working with software, including Microsoft Office, Git, DITA, XML, and Jira.
Responsibilities
  • Conceptualize and design new software features.
  • Gather requirements and designs the software model for the required features.
  • Develop clean, maintainable, reusable, well annotated code.
  • Thoroughly tests software in standalone and hardware-in-the-loop simulation.
  • Continually improves existing software, troubleshooting and debugging complex technical issues.
  • Identify and track risks, issues, and opportunities for improvement in software and system design.
  • Supports the creation of and/or writes user manuals for use of software.
  • Document engineering concepts, design, test results, and analysis in technical reports.
  • Support flight testing as required.
  • Maintain current knowledge of software engineering best practices, architecture, languages, and tools.
  • Implement best practice in work and recommends improvements to current practices.
  • Transfer knowledge of system and software design to peers.

Airbus is a leader in the aerospace industry, providing commercial aircraft, helicopters, defense systems, and space technologies. The company designs popular passenger planes and offers rotorcraft for emergency services and military operations. Airbus stands out by focusing on innovation and sustainability, exploring hydrogen-powered aircraft to reduce environmental impact. Its goal is to advance aerospace technology while meeting the evolving needs of the industry and contributing to global sustainability.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

Blagnac, France

Founded

1970

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Growing demand for sustainable aviation fuels aligns with Airbus' environmental initiatives.
  • Thermoplastic fuselage designs could reduce costs and improve fuel efficiency significantly.
  • VR Flight Trainer enhances pilot training, positioning Airbus as a leader in aviation training.

What critics are saying

  • Boeing's restructuring may increase competition, affecting Airbus' market share.
  • Complexity in integrating quantum algorithms may challenge gesture-based control system development.
  • Regulatory hurdles for thermoplastic fuselage designs could delay market entry.

What makes Airbus unique

  • Airbus leads in sustainable aviation with hydrogen-powered aircraft and sustainable fuel initiatives.
  • The company pioneers thermoplastic fuselage designs, enhancing cost efficiency and fuel savings.
  • Airbus integrates AI and quantum computing in defense, advancing gesture-based control systems.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Paid Vacation

Parental Leave

401(k) Retirement Plan

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

Professional Development Budget

Flexible Work Hours

Company News

Forbes
Oct 16th, 2024
Ryanair Chief Says Boeing To Blame For Lower Traffic Growth

Michael O'Leary became CEO of Ryanair in 1994 and has held the role ever since. NurPhoto via Getty ImagesRyanair’s CEO Michael O’Leary said that in his 30 years in the airline industry he had never seen capacity constraints like those he’s facing now.The longtime chief of Europe’s largest airline laid out the difficulties that Boeing’s delayed deliveries are creating for his carrier in an interview with Reuters Wednesday."We were supposed to get 20 deliveries before the end of December. They'll probably come now in January and February, and that's fine. We'll have them in time for next summer,” O’Leary said. “The big issue for Ryanair is we're due 30 aircraft in March, April, May and June of next year, and how many of those will we get?""I think we're clearly going to walk back our traffic growth for next year, because I don't think we're going to get all those 30 aircraft," O’Leary added.Boeing has been struggling in recent weeks after a strike by its largest union brought the production of commercial aircraft to a virtual standstill. Negotiations have reportedly reached a stalemate.Boeing’s CEO said late last week the company was planning to cut 17,000 jobs as part of a restructuring aimed reduced costs, and the plane maker said this week it would raise up to $25 billion through stock and debt offerings along with a $10 billion credit agreement.The U.S

Aero-mag
Oct 15th, 2024
Airbus unveils new thermoplastic aircraft fuselage design

Airbus unveils new thermoplastic aircraft fuselage design.

The Mirror
Oct 12th, 2024
New plane design launching in 2025 could be 'gamechanger' for hand luggage rules

In place of the current overhead storage bins which are only big enough to lie a wheelie-case flat - meaning a lot of room is waste above it - Airbus has unveiled the 'Airspace L Bins'.

Combat Aircraft
Oct 11th, 2024
Airbus, Multiverse to build gesture-based control system for fighters

Airbus Defence and Space is collaborating with Spain-headquartered Multiverse Computing to develop advanced gesture recognition software for future fighter aircraft, leveraging quantum-inspired algorithms and Large Language Models (LLMs).

Aviation Week
Oct 9th, 2024
Airbus Working With Spanish AI Firm On Future Fighter Avionics

Airbus has selected Spanish artificial intelligence company Multiverse Computing to help develop a new approach to avionics interaction for next-generation combat aircraft.

INACTIVE