
Fractile is a London-based AI chip startup building in-memory computing processors that aim to run large language model inference far faster and cheaper than today's GPUs. They're hiring a Silicon Infrastructure Engineer in London to build the tooling and infrastructure behind its novel chip architecture. This hardware engineering role sits within the UK's semiconductor sector.
Silicon Infrastructure Engineer
Fractile is building the silicon, systems and software to break through the memory wall, the fundamental hardware constraint standing between today's AI and what comes next.
The frontier of AI is no longer a research problem. The tasks AI can complete are doubling in complexity every six to seven months and the tokens required to complete them are scaling with it. Sequential reasoning, the kind that can't be parallelised away, means the internal clock speed of inference systems is the critical constraint. What stands between where we are today and the future potential of AI isn't smarter algorithms; it's the hardware to run them fast enough to matter.
Today's chips are hitting their wall. We're building the ones that don't.
Fractile is seeking to increase the clock speed of global progress, one chip at a time.
Key Responsibilities:
It would be great if you have:
Preferred Qualifications:
About us:
Export controls:
Our work involves technologies subject to UK and international export control regulations. Certain roles may require additional eligibility checks to ensure compliance with applicable law. We'll be transparent about this throughout the hiring process.
Fractile is a London-based AI chip startup developing in-memory computing processors designed to run large language model inference up to 100x faster and 10x cheaper than current GPU systems. Founded by Oxford Robotics Institute PhD graduate Walter Goodwin, the company's novel chip architecture fuses computation with memory to eliminate the data-shuttling bottleneck that limits conventional hardware. Fractile emerged from stealth in July 2024 and has since announced a £100M commitment to expand UK operations, including a new hardware engineering facility in Bristol. The team includes senior hires from NVIDIA, ARM, and Imagination Technologies.