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Electrical Engineer

Cambridge
5 months ago
Applications closed

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Position: Electrical Engineer
Location: Cambridgeshire
Salary: £45,000 to £66,000 + Excellent Benefits / Prospects (including Relocation Assistance, Bonus etc…)
If there is something stopping you from achieving all you’re capable of, you’ll relish a role with a company that will positively encourage you to be pro-active – a real opportunity to release your true potential.
The Company: Our Client, an innovative dynamic passionate Company that manufactures UV lamps for the printing industry and other applications. Their high-quality photonic solutions provide improved process reliability, and more innovation in industrial manufacturing, scientific, and medical applications.
Due to sustained continued expansion they now require an Electrical Engineer working within the Product Development group to deliver electrical and subsystem designs to enable the development of new system products from concept through to final market release
The Person: Candidates suitable for consideration should be able to provide evidence of the following:

  • A HNC / HND or Degree in Electrical Engineering or a related discipline
  • Understanding and experience of PLC programming / Control System Design
    The successful candidate will enjoy a salary of between £45,000 to £66,000 (DOE) + Excellent Benefits / Prospects (including Relocation Assistance / Bonus), an employment package that you would expect from a company that values its employees.
    Do you have the courage to take on this challenge?

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Quantum Computing Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Quantum Department

Quantum computing has shifted from lab curiosity to the next frontier of high-impact computing. Across the UK, universities, national labs, start-ups, and established tech and finance firms are building quantum teams to explore algorithms, design hardware, and deliver quantum-ready software. As momentum grows, so does the need for clear, robust team structures. Because quantum R&D spans physics, engineering, computer science, and product, ambiguity about who does what can slow progress, increase risk, and inflate costs. This guide maps the typical roles in a modern quantum computing department, how they collaborate across the research-to-product lifecycle, skills and backgrounds UK employers expect, indicative salary ranges, common pitfalls, and practical ways to structure teams that move fast without breaking science.