Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
to deeply understand how various AI algorithms work and how to implement them efficiently on a wide range of existing and upcoming hardware. Help us push the boundaries of AI compute, collaborating with
-
role The successful candidates will work in the Nanomagnetism group led by Prof. Andreas Michels at the University of Luxembourg: Explore the relationship between intrinsic and collective magnetic
-
, you will be part of an interdisciplinary team with three professors and two postdoctoral researchers, specialized in spatial planning, (active) mobility, and futures research. You will also work closely
-
processing, network resource management to improve the performance of the future wireless communication systems. Finally, due to the large-scale nature, complexity, and heterogeneity of 6G networks
-
Situational Awareness, Planning and Control for Autonomous Robots using S-Graphs), funded by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR). The successful candidate will work under the main supervision of Prof
-
of the following topics: Strong emphasis on telecommunications and networks theoretical background Knowledge of 3GPP standards up to 5G at the system level Data Analytics and Management Problem solver Knowledge
-
. The position is embedded in a broader research agenda on trustworthy, data-driven software engineering and AI-assisted development. The successful candidate will work on Bug Report Intelligence
-
an interdisciplinary team with three professors and two postdoctoral researchers, specialized in spatial planning, (active) mobility, and futures research. You will also work closely with another PhD student
-
is 4 years. The PhD candidate will join COMPSOIL, a dynamic and international research environment, benefiting from the University's high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure and opportunities
-
ICT Services & Applications. The Signal Processing and Communications (SIGCOM) research group of SnT conducts research aimed at designing, emulating and testing new high-performance systems