Students from the Department of Computer Engineering and Electronics visited the office of IT company GlobalLogic in Lviv.

On November 21, 2025, students of the Department of Computer Engineering and Electronics visited the Lviv office of the IT company GlobalLogic. The event was attended by students of the first and second cycles of higher education in the Educational and Professional Program Computer Engineering, as well as students of the first cycle in the Educational and Professional Program Computer-Aided Integrated Circuit Design.

GlobalLogic has an exceptionally extensive network of engineering offices around the world, including 61 engineering centers, over 570 active clients, more than 33,000 specialists in 25 countries, and more than 2,100 product releases per year. In Ukraine, the company operates four main offices located in Lviv, Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Mykolaiv.

Senior University & Education Program Specialist, Mariana Buchii delivered a presentation introducing the students to GlobalLogic, which is now a member of the world-renowned Hitachi Group, serving as a reliable partner in digital engineering for some of the largest and most progressive companies worldwide.

In her talk, the speaker emphasized that GlobalLogic is rapidly expanding its digital engineering expertise “from chip to cloud” and creates digital products that have a profound impact on everyday human life across various industries. Additionally, the students learned a great deal of valuable information about internship opportunities across different GlobalLogic programs and the specifics of future employment.

Senior Embedded Software Developer at GlobalLogic, Andrii Neborak, presented a detailed report on the main stages of an embedded project’s lifecycle, namely Analysis, Design, Development, Testing, and Maintenance. The speaker elaborated on the requirements for the analysis stage, including market research for similar solutions and assessing the novelty of an idea; described the process of creating a project or prototype taking into account scheduling, technical or financial estimations, technology selection, and prototype manufacturing; outlined the product testing stage using test cases, certification procedures, user manual preparation, pilot batch production, and selective implementation; and explained the final maintenance stage, which includes user support, minor bug fixing, and data collection for the next iteration.

The students also had the opportunity to participate in a quiz on embedded computer systems and digital technologies. The most active participants received branded gifts from GlobalLogic.

After the main part of the event, Maryana Buchii guided the students on a tour of the key areas of the GlobalLogic office. The students were able to see the employees’ workspaces, the company’s laboratories in the field of embedded systems, as well as the company’s core developments in the fields of the Internet of Things, robotics, and medicine.

The students and academic staff of the Department of Computer Engineering and Electronics express their sincere gratitude to Maryana Buchii and the employees of GlobalLogic for the insightful presentations and the guided tour, and wish them continued fruitful cooperation.