We are looking for a Graduate Software Engineer to join the HP Wolf Security R&D team in Cambridge. We are a small, collaborative team which is responsible for ensuring that complex Windows applications run seamlessly inside these micro-VMs.

As a Graduate Software Engineer you will be helping our engineers solve some challenging problems in letting our customers get the most out of our nifty yet secure micro-virtual machines / micro-VMs. (see https://www.hpwolf.com/).

Requirements

  • C++ Coding Experience
  • Windows Development / Windows Platform Development

You will have an interest in or exposure to the following

  • Endpoint security / Malware
  • Operating System internals
  • Component Object Model (COM)

This Graduate opportunity is a 2 year / 24 month Contracts which is applicable for students graduating in 2024.

About you

You’re out to reimagine and reinvent what’s possible- in your career as well as the world around you. So are we. We love taking on tough challenges, disrupting the status quo, and creating what’s next. We’re in search of talented people who are inspired by big challenges, driven to learn and grow, and dedicated to making a meaningful difference.

About HP Wolf Security

The primary focus of the HP Wolf Security team is developing cyber security solutions to protect our customers devices and data. The digital threat landscape is ever-changing and as the cyber security industry reacts and adapts to changes, so too do the malware authors. Our unique micro-virtualization technology ensures that customers are protected from even the most bleeding edge cyber security threats. That micro-virtualization technology forms a key pillar in a wider cyber security suite that we're actively developing.

Our history

Inspired by the isolation principles of traditional virtualization, our team known then as Bromium, created a game-changing technology called micro-virtualization to protect end users against advanced malware. Every task the user performs, such as opening a document or clicking on a link, is isolated in its own micro-VM, with access to just the resources required for that task, and existing just for the life of the task. Protection is thus provided through isolation, without relying on detection, hence reliably defending the user from polymorphic and even zero-day malware.

Bromium was acquired by HP Inc on 19 September 2019 forming HP Wolf Security.

For more information, visit our website: https://www.hp.com/uk-en/security/endpoint-security-solutions.html