There are a lot of things you can work on within Boeing. I got to touch every single piece of software engineering I could think of and more, and got to figure out what I like. I am still learning what I'd like to do. The people there are also very helpful and want you to succeed.
Since it's a big company, it can get slow to get equipment and approval on some kinds of technologies, depending on what project you're working on. Also, a big company means bureaucracy.
To be more fluid with the engineers and give them more freedom to learn new things.
Not bad, but since the software test is in pen and paper, you should practice pseudocode and not cheat. Interviews are now in the post-AI era, where companies use it extensively or not at all.
Though it was pre-recorded, there was one behavioral question, one coding question, and one recording of you explaining your solution. The question was impossible, and I later looked it up to see it wasn’t actually solvable.
Three engineers interviewed me at my university during a career fair. Two were mechanical, and one was a DevOps engineer. They introduced themselves and asked me some questions. Overall, it was very relaxed.
Not bad, but since the software test is in pen and paper, you should practice pseudocode and not cheat. Interviews are now in the post-AI era, where companies use it extensively or not at all.
Though it was pre-recorded, there was one behavioral question, one coding question, and one recording of you explaining your solution. The question was impossible, and I later looked it up to see it wasn’t actually solvable.
Three engineers interviewed me at my university during a career fair. Two were mechanical, and one was a DevOps engineer. They introduced themselves and asked me some questions. Overall, it was very relaxed.