
Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Type: Full-time, hybrid (max. 1-2 days remote work per week)
The future of AI computing builds upon light. Q.ANT is building photonic processing systems that compute with light - delivering a scalable, energy-efficient alternative to transistor-based architectures for next-generation AI and HPC applications.
As LLVM / MLIR Compiler Architect - Photonic Computing (f/m/d), you will design and build the compiler stack that brings photonic computing to life. You will shape the interface between developers and hardware, define how software frameworks drive photonic execution, and co-design the system architecture that will power Q.ANT's next-generation products.
This isn't incremental optimization - it's defining the compiler structure from the ground up for a fundamentally new compute paradigm. You'll sit at the boundary to algorithms and software ecosystems, and you feed into low level software interfaces and hardware architecture. Your design decisions will shape how Q.ANT's photonic processors evolve across generations and how efficiently they execute the next generation of AI workloads.
We're looking for a technical architect who gets energized by building foundational infrastructure from scratch, shaping hardware-software co-design, and translating complex technical concepts across teams to drive a unified vision forward.
Ready to define how developers will program photonic computers?
We are looking forward to receiving your application!
Q.ANT is an equal opportunity employer. We celebrate diversity and are committed to creating an inclusive environment for all employees.

Q.ANT is a photonic deep-tech scale-up developing photonic processing solutions that compute natively with light and deliver a scalable alternative to transistor-based systems. Its Light Empowered Native Arithmetics (LENA) architecture delivers analog co-processing power optimised for complex computation and enabling energy-efficient performance for next-generation AI and HPC applications. Q.ANT operates its own Thin-Film Lithium Niobate (TFLN) chip pilot line in collaboration with the Institute for Microelectronics Stuttgart, IMS CHIPS, and is currently shipping its Native Processing Servers to selected partners. Q.ANT was founded by Michael Förtsch in 2018 and is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany.