Change the world. Love your job.
As a Senior Engineer in the Application Drivers & Software Infrastructure team, you will contribute to the design, development, and testing of customer-facing peripheral drivers (SPI, I2C, ADC, GPIO, etc.) and embedded software infrastructure for TI’s connectivity devices. You will work closely with the team lead and other engineers to support Zephyr RTOS integration, CI/CD automation, and SDK delivery. You will have the opportunity to collaborate with a cross-cultural, multisite team and global stakeholders. This role offers strong technical growth, hands-on experience, and opportunities to learn from experienced mentors.
Basic Qualifications
Skills Needed
Primary Responsibilities
Why TI?
About Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments Incorporated (Nasdaq: TXN) is a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures and sells analog and embedded processing chips for markets such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment and enterprise systems. At our core, we have a passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors. This passion is alive today as each generation of innovation builds upon the last to make our technology more reliable, more affordable and lower power, making it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere. Learn more at TI.com
Texas Instruments is an equal opportunity employer and supports a diverse, inclusive work environment.
If you are interested in this position, please apply to this requisition.

We are a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures and sells analog and embedded processing chips for markets such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, enterprise systems and communications equipment. At our core, we have a passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors. This passion is alive today as each generation of innovation builds upon the last to make our technology more reliable, more affordable and lower power, making it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere. Learn more at TI.com.