Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Engineering of ETH Zurich is a community of approximately 50 researchers from more than 20 countries working on the development of methods and computational tools for automation, exploring their potential
-
climate projections and weather forecasting by adapting numerical models to leverage new and emerging computing architectures. Project background MeteoSwiss plays a crucial role in delivering climate
-
vision/language models is a plus, but not a requirement. Preferred candidates will know professional software development practices, such as Code Quality measures, distributed development workflows (e.g
-
100%, Zurich, fixed-term The Distributed Computing Group is a research group at ETH Zurich. We are interested in various research topics on new and upcoming areas off the beaten path. Our three
-
through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description Doctoral Student Position – Climate and
-
research on power electronic converter systems, which are required, for example, in future energy distribution systems for the integration of renewable energy sources or in traction applications/electric
-
100%, Zurich, fixed-term The Sensing, Interaction & Perception Lab invites applications for a PhD position in Computational Interaction, focusing on sensor-based input detection for Augmented and
-
integration of existing components for high throughput data distribution between HPC data centers, software systems and telescope instrumentation, particularly focusing on the digital correlator and science
-
100%, Zurich, fixed-term The Distributed Computing (DISCO) Group is a research group at ETH Zurich, led by Prof. Dr. Roger Wattenhofer . We are interested in a variety of research topics on new and
-
develop and apply computational approaches to identify policy strategies that are politically feasible and compatible with changing land-use demands, while also considering the distributional impacts