Modern digital products run on platforms: services, APIs, integrations, and the cloud-native foundation that ties them together. At Hypersolid, you build across that whole picture, frontend to backend to the integrations in between, in composable environments where services are independent and everything talks through APIs.
We call this role Platform Engineer rather than fullstack on purpose. Working agentically changes what "fullstack" means: you move further across the stack, faster, and your job is to direct that work and judge it, not just type it. As a Platform Engineering intern, you work inside that reality from day one.
What you'll do
You join a platform team and own real tasks on real projects. Not isolated exercises. Not a sandbox. Together with your mentor, you set learning goals and shape an internship that builds genuine depth across development: building features end-to-end, designing APIs, and wiring services together in the cloud.
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Graduation internship (from September 2026): you research a platform-engineering challenge, build a prototype or proof of concept, and present your findings as your graduation project.
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Working internship: in some cases possible, contributing directly to live projects.
What the work looks like
You work across the stack, from the services and APIs to the cloud they run on.
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Agentic tools get you to working code fast, but the distance from generated code to something reliable and production-ready is where the real work lives, and that judgment stays yours.
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You direct the agent, then review what it produces: you run your own tests, verify behaviour in the target environment, and confirm the work meets requirements before it goes to review.
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You never accept generated output uncritically. Seniors challenge you. Ownership is yours.
The specific stack matters less than the mindset. We're not looking for someone who's mastered one technology, we're looking for someone who picks things up fast, thinks in outcomes, and uses every tool available to get there.
Who you are
You're studying software development, computer science, or a related field. More importantly: agentic AI isn't a topic you follow from a distance, you're deep in it. You build things with it, experiment outside class, and have opinions about what works and what doesn't. You're the person your friends ask which tool to use.
You take ownership, surface problems early, and care about the quality of what you ship.
Bring something you built. It tells us more than your CV.