The company's values on security and inclusion of its users is what stuck with me after my internship. The community, opportunities, benefits, and work/life balance were everything I could have asked for.
Speaking from personal experience, I disliked the team I was on. I was left alone and had to reach out to get help from other teams. My manager never spoke to me. They were a busy team, but I do not believe that the team should have been allowed an intern.
The majority of Apple management is fantastic. I was in a specific situation where I was not taken care of.
I would have loved feedback and guidance.
My skip manager filled in to help me, so I know it was a very rare case for me.
Overall smooth. Had 3 interviews: one behavioral and 2 technical. Heavy system design and debugging. Interviewers were nice, standard interview format with an introduction and then mostly technical questions. Some OOP concepts needed as well.
It was a pretty standard big tech interview process. At a high level, it had the following steps: * Recruiter call * Hiring Manager screen * Technical phone screen * Onsite
One interview, supposed to be with the hiring manager, was followed by a group of three interviews. These interviews were primarily focused on computer architecture and verification concepts. There was also some coding related to these computer archi
Overall smooth. Had 3 interviews: one behavioral and 2 technical. Heavy system design and debugging. Interviewers were nice, standard interview format with an introduction and then mostly technical questions. Some OOP concepts needed as well.
It was a pretty standard big tech interview process. At a high level, it had the following steps: * Recruiter call * Hiring Manager screen * Technical phone screen * Onsite
One interview, supposed to be with the hiring manager, was followed by a group of three interviews. These interviews were primarily focused on computer architecture and verification concepts. There was also some coding related to these computer archi