Software Engineer - Maritime Mission Systems
Role details
Job location
Tech stack
Job description
Thales Maritime Mission Systems provide a unique opportunity for you to create software that delivers a state of the art Sonar capability for UK and International Navies. Our systems are developed for a wide range of significant defence projects, including the next generation of autonomous mine hunters, Conventional and hybrid mine hunters, the Astute class submarines, Merlin helicopters, Type 23 frigates etc. As a Thales Maritime Mission Systems software engineer, you will develop the next-generation Mission systems and Sonar technologies, for which we are world-renowned.
You will be a key member of the Software Development team based at the Thales site in Manchester, and will have the opportunity to collaborate with Thales sites in the UK and overseas.
Key responsibilities will include the design, implementation and test of our SW solutions, using industry standard tools and methods.
Technical Skills
You will be required to provide evidence of activity that supports the desire to pursue a career in Software Engineering at Thales.
Requirements
- Demonstrable skills in SW development (Java/C++ in a Linux environment)
- An understanding of the SW development lifecycle
- Use of industry standard tooling for SW Development (IDEs, Unit Test frameworks, Static analysis etc)
- Strong written and verbal communication skills
- An ability to work as a key member of the team
- A desire to take responsibility for your professional development
Desirable requirements:
- Experience of Agile methodologies
- Awareness of Software configuration control principles
- Awareness of real time constraints in software development
- A knowledge of Software Architectures and Design Patterns
Minimum Educational Requirements
Degree in a relevant subject e.g. Software Engineering, Computer Science, Maths, Physics or Engineering.
Benefits & conditions
Annual leave, Employee discount, Paid volunteer time, Private medical insurance, Cycle to work scheme