Raxium manufactures micro-displays using semiconductor processes at micron scale, with a tech stack built around hardware simulation (Verilog, SystemVerilog, MATLAB, LabVIEW), statistical process control (JMP, Minitab), and infrastructure automation (Terraform, Ansible, GCP). The hiring surge—21 roles posted in the last 30 days, heavily weighted toward senior engineers (10 of 21)—and pain-point focus on production ramp, equipment reliability, and vendor logistics indicate the company is moving from prototype to manufacturing scale-up, a phase where hardware maturity and supply-chain resilience become competitive moats.
Raxium is a semiconductor manufacturer founded in 2018, headquartered in Fremont, CA, building micro-display technology at scale. The company operates across the full stack: hardware design and simulation, process engineering, metrology, and manufacturing operations. Current headcount spans 51–200 employees, with engineering as the largest function. Active hiring spans the United States, Taiwan, and Canada—geography typical for semiconductor fabs and supply chains. Core challenges center on equipment performance, production ramp velocity, and vendor coordination—standard friction points as companies transition from pilot manufacturing to production volume.
Raxium uses Python, SQL, MATLAB, LabVIEW, Verilog, and SystemVerilog for hardware design and simulation; JMP and Minitab for statistical process control; AutoCAD for design; GCP for cloud infrastructure; and Linux, Terraform, and Ansible for operations.
Raxium is focused on production ramp and manufacturing scale. Current projects include material management systems, vendor planning for semiconductor fabs, metrology system documentation, and process improvements driven by data analysis.
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