Posts Tagged ‘software’

Engineering Update

Friday, June 11th, 2010
Quality Jobs!

Quality Jobs!

Hi everyone! I thought I would take advantage of MyScienceJobs this weeks to give you an update on the Engineering end of the Medical Device jobs.

Unfortunately the Kitting Director position has been put on hold due to restructuring, but nevertheless the

  • Software Quality Engineer

role is still open amongst others!

If you have a background in Software Validation or QA Software or something similar in a high volume manufacturing plant/ indeed Medical Device then we want to hear from you!

Get in touch!

215,000 NEW Science Jobs by 2020

Friday, March 12th, 2010

215,000 NEW Science Jobs by 2020. This is the ambitious plan conceived in a report authored by the Innovation Taskforce.

Laser Research has multiple applications-including telecoms and Internet V.2

Laser Research has multiple applications-including telecoms and Internet V.2

An element of which will involves a comprehensive and revised broadband roll out, a review of  Taxation and Intellectual Property and a strategic review of investment into various domestic and FDI R&D projects incorporating Irish National Technological universities which aims ultimately at turning Ireland into an international innovation hub.

The reports authors who include such luminaries such as Cisco, KPMG, and various high profile software entrepenurs as well as representitives from Enterprise Ireland have given 24 recommendations which will provide a road map for Irelands  technological future.

Key of these recommendations is a change in attitude towards failure  and entrepenureship which it is hopped will provide a spur to Irish  innovation and thus Job creation.

Myscience jobs wishes all success to Irish Entrepeneurs wishing to extend the boundaries of science and  technology, and looks forward to the creation of the next generation of science jobs that can only add to Irelands reputation and future prosperity.

Validating Quality Control

Thursday, February 4th, 2010
Validation Engineer Validating Medical Device Equipment

Validation Engineer Validating Medical Device Equipment

Validating Quality Control is essential for products being manufactured under extremely highly tolerances and to demanding Quality standards such as those found with medical device and pharmaceutical manufacture.

Validation is a quality control process that measures and tests against requirements that a system, product or service is achieving what it is required to do. For instance in manufacturing it is a process of zeroing equipment or plant to the exact parameters it must operate to, to produce product to an exact standard inorder to achieve a stated and fixed end result within fixed specifications outside of which it is not acceptable.

In essence it is  the process of fitness of purpose testing with the end user or other stake holders.

In many circumstances in manufacturing it can involve either computers, (hardware and software), equipment or an entire operating process or facility.

Validation in short can be explained by the question, “are you building the right thing?” and often requires reference to the Users Requirement Specifications or URS and the validation process can require a set of stringent protocols to achive completion referred to by the following terminology, IQ (Installation Qualification/OQ(Operational Qualification/Performance Qualification 

Opportunities  in Science jobs in Ireland today include positions for Validation Engineers, Validation Managers and Validation Document Control for a variety of industries and are readily found in high spec environments such as Biopharma, Pharmaceuticals, Semiconductors and Medical Device Manufacturing and are amongst some of the most highly paid science and engineering occupations availlable despite the current economic conditions.

Science Jobs are Engineering the Future

Thursday, January 7th, 2010
Science Jobs in Engineering

Science Jobs in Engineering

Science Jobs are engineering the future in Ireland today as the demand for R&D Engineers, Polymer Engineers, QA/RA Engineers and openings for senior professionals such as, Head of Research & Development,  Regulatory Affairs Specialists and Scientists continues to increase despite the economic downturn.

In particuar Research and Development investment from inward and outward sources has trebled in the past 10 years and is now at €2.6 billion or almost 1.7% of GNP. Intelectual property rights within the pharmaceutical, medical devices, software and ICT  manufacturing industries are now being given serious consideration as a major and strategic contributor to Ireland’s economy which as a revenue generator has a far greater long term financial generational potential than energy resource such as offshore oil and gas which todate have proved so far to be both costly and disappointing.

With the advent of the internet, Ireland has found its engineers and scientists research and design skills are now open for trade with the world and unlike natural resources are only limited by the numbers we educate and train in our universities and colleges.

To this end, Ireland has already begun a move away from depending on the goodwill or self interest of overseas multinationals and is now making provision for the future itself by strategically identifying those industries and markets worldwide that our native human resource skills can be applied to and to gain our financial share of  a global market that numbers in the Trillions of Euros.

As previously mentioned Ireland is already at an advanced stage of exploiting opportunities within the global nano technology markets that combine hybrid technolgies such as biopharma -nanobots, programable drugs and micro medical devices.

Instead of being discouraged by the limitations of what resources we have had in the past, Ireland is now positively assessing what we do have and the futher potential we have by shaping the world around us to our advantage to engineer the future.

After all  the description of Ireland in the past as that as the Island of Saints and Scholars is not far from what we would wish overseas investors seeing Ireland anew as, the Isle of R&D.