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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.

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

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