Many excellent trainings, both on Finance and Programming.
The intern program is nice, and I learned a lot from my teammates.
The work can be boring if you have been there for many years. A messy codebase makes it hard to change and maintain.
From my point of view, the architecture is old. It's worthwhile to invest in new technologies before it is too late.
I had an initial phone interview and then an on-site interview. The phone interview featured standard questions about C and C++, with some string parsing. The on-site interview consisted of four rounds: * Two rounds with engineers * One round with m
Applied online through the university's career portal. I had an initial 45-minute phone interview which included pretty basic syntax-based and algorithm questions. No coding was involved in this interview. Then, I went to New York 10 days after my
I saw the posting on my college career services website and applied on Bloomberg's website. I was contacted about a month later and had a 45-minute phone interview. The interview included two technical questions about data structures: * The first
I had an initial phone interview and then an on-site interview. The phone interview featured standard questions about C and C++, with some string parsing. The on-site interview consisted of four rounds: * Two rounds with engineers * One round with m
Applied online through the university's career portal. I had an initial 45-minute phone interview which included pretty basic syntax-based and algorithm questions. No coding was involved in this interview. Then, I went to New York 10 days after my
I saw the posting on my college career services website and applied on Bloomberg's website. I was contacted about a month later and had a 45-minute phone interview. The interview included two technical questions about data structures: * The first