Dad jeans, big paychecks: hardware engineers are winning the AI boom

8 hours ago 9

Steve Wozniak (right) battles for control of the ball while playing polo on a Segway's in Silicon Valley in 2004.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak (right) battles for control of the ball while playing polo on a Segway's in Silicon Valley in 2004. Jose Carlos Fajardo/mct/ZUMAPRESS/Reuters

For decades in Silicon Valley, hardware engineers were the overlooked nerds of tech. They wore dad jeans, clunky tennis shoes, and quietly designed chips while software engineers soaked up the glamour, stock grants, and sky-high salaries.

The AI boom is flipping that script.

According to Levels.fyi data, hardware engineer compensation at the entry and mid-career levels is growing two to three times faster than software pay.

Companies building the physical infrastructure of AI (Nvidia, Broadcom, SpaceX, and others) are scrambling for talent. Suddenly, the people working with actual silicon, power systems, and cooling gear are becoming some of tech's hottest, and best-paid, hires.

A chart showing tech compensation trends

A chart showing tech compensation trends  Levels.fyi

Sign up for BI's Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at [email protected].

Read next

Alistair Barr is the author of Business Insider's Tech Memo newsletter. Sign up here. Before that, he was BI's Global Tech Editor and the Big Tech team leader at Bloomberg, following a reporting career at The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Reuters, and MarketWatch. Alistair won a Gerald Loeb Award in 2007 for coverage of short selling and was a finalist in 2013 for scoops on the Facebook IPO. More recently, he won a 2024 San Francisco Press Club award for commentary. Got a tip? Reach out using the secure messaging app Signal (+1 415-341-4927) or via email on [email protected].ExpertiseAlistair oversees all things Big Tech, along with startups and venture capital. He writes analysis and columns about topics including generative AI, large language models, cloud computing, semiconductors, online search, e-commerce, EVs, robotics, and autonomous vehicles.Popular StoriesArtificial Intelligence:It's getting harder to make big leaps at the frontier of AIOpenAI's AI-adjusted earnings numbers have echoes of Groupon and WeWorkDeath by LLM: Stack Overflow's decline, and its plan to survive, shows the future of free online data in an AI worldCloud computing:Amazon dominated the first cloud era. The AI boom has kicked off Cloud 2.0, and the company doesn't have a head start this time.In cloud, there's AI (which is hot) and everything else (which is not)Chips:Why Intel is still so important: Real countries have fabsApple's made-in-the-USA chips signal a turnaround for the US's big semiconductor betEVs and Tesla:Tesla's AI supercomputer has a Silicon Valley town rushing to meet surging electricity demandTesla's Cybertruck is outselling almost every other EV in the USOnline Search:Google is losing its status as a verbA simple way to fix search: Bright pink ads

Business Insider

Follow Following

Every time publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox!

Look out for an alert in your inbox the next time publishes a story!

Every time a new story is published, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox!

Look out for an alert in your inbox the next time a new story is published!

By clicking “Sign up”, you agree to receive emails from Business Insider. In addition, you accept Insider’s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

More stories by More stories from

Read Entire Article
| Opini Rakyat Politico | | |