I have been working with AMD full-time for over a year now, and I like the working environment a lot.
Lots of flexibility working from home, flexible working hours, above-average benefits, and nice teammates.
There is a bit of a lack of documentation, and thus you learn by asking existing team members. The nice thing is that they are very responsive and willing to help anytime. I wish there were more team outings than just the annual team dinner, and more social activities.
It was a very tough round of interviews. I was able to make it through. There were a lot of questions from VLSI and digital electronics, as well as questions related to the job description.
The interview process consisted of: * A 30-minute HR call. * A 30-minute hiring manager call (general CV overview). * Four 45-minute interviews with various engineers, including one behavioural interview and the rest mostly technical, featurin
Basic question from DSA and memory. I joined as fresher, so the interview was not very deep. They asked me about the types of cache, linked lists. Also some questions from Digital Electronics.
It was a very tough round of interviews. I was able to make it through. There were a lot of questions from VLSI and digital electronics, as well as questions related to the job description.
The interview process consisted of: * A 30-minute HR call. * A 30-minute hiring manager call (general CV overview). * Four 45-minute interviews with various engineers, including one behavioural interview and the rest mostly technical, featurin
Basic question from DSA and memory. I joined as fresher, so the interview was not very deep. They asked me about the types of cache, linked lists. Also some questions from Digital Electronics.