As a Camera Systems Engineer at Meta, you will help build the next generation of wearable devices and AI glasses by developing innovative camera system software and frameworks.
You will work closely with cross-functional teams to deliver robust, high-performance camera features that redefine how people capture, share, and interact with the world.
Responsibilities:
Software Engineer, Camera Responsibilities:
Analyze, design, develop, and debug camera features and frameworks on Android-based wearable systems
Collaborate in a team environment across multiple scientific and engineering disciplines, making architectural tradeoffs to rapidly deliver software solutions
Develop and optimize system-level software for camera subsystems, including sensor integration, ISP interfacing, and camera HAL/frameworks
Develop clean, maintainable code and debug complex problems across the camera stack
Learn constantly, dive into new areas with unfamiliar technologies, and embrace the ambiguity of problem solving
Qualification and experience:
Minimum Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, or a related technical field, or equivalent practical experience
5+ years of software development experience
3+ years of experience developing camera frameworks, drivers, or imaging software on Android, Linux, or similar platforms
Experience with C++ and/or Java in large codebases
Experience developing, debugging, and shipping software products on consumer devices
Demonstrated experience working collaboratively in cross-functional teams
Preferred:
Preferred Qualifications:
MS or PhD in Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, or a related field
Experience with image processing, ISP tuning, or camera sensor integration
Experience with Android internals, AOSP, or Linux camera frameworks
Familiarity with performance optimization, memory management, and debugging tools for embedded/mobile systems
Experience collaborating with hardware, silicon, or external vendors to deliver camera solutions across the stack