People are great. The new building is being developed, with a constant workflow and expectations. Benefits are great, including extra PTO buy-in.
Management keeps getting restructured, which delays the workflow. I've been here several years, and not a single project has been implemented.
There's too much red tape; it takes forever to get anything done.
It was pretty straightforward. I came on as a contractor initially, then transitioned after two years. It was more of an on-the-job interview. The move to employee was seamless, with the same job and same leader.
Interviewed for the React Engineer position. The first 20-30 minutes included questions about React and general coding practices, such as: * React hooks * Class vs. functional components * How you approach code reviews The coding portion involved f
This was a pure technical interview. It featured mostly technical questions, with not many "get to know you" questions. It felt very much like a test, with questions fired for about an hour. All questions were Java-related, at least for this positio
It was pretty straightforward. I came on as a contractor initially, then transitioned after two years. It was more of an on-the-job interview. The move to employee was seamless, with the same job and same leader.
Interviewed for the React Engineer position. The first 20-30 minutes included questions about React and general coding practices, such as: * React hooks * Class vs. functional components * How you approach code reviews The coding portion involved f
This was a pure technical interview. It featured mostly technical questions, with not many "get to know you" questions. It felt very much like a test, with questions fired for about an hour. All questions were Java-related, at least for this positio