Broadcom was a great working environment. The job was challenging (in a good way), with great co-workers. I felt compensation was fair for the required effort. The company continues to push you to achieve more.
Working for Broadcom can be stressful if you can't let work take a back seat at times. The management team will continue to demand as much as you will give.
Thanks for the opportunity to work at Broadcom. It was great while it lasted, but it does reach a point where moving on is a good thing.
The phone interview was normal, with questions about projects on the resume. I was called on-site two weeks later. The questions were: * Divide by 2 clock * Divide by 3 clock * FIFO read/write rates for equilibrium * 3-bit Gray code counter * Low p
They are very urgent. No phone interview. Call me on the day around noon and want me to be on-site on the same day about 4:30 pm.
I received an interview invitation after sending my application via the career page. The one-hour interview started directly with questions, with no proper introduction or small talk. Interviews are opportunities for both sides, the interviewee and
The phone interview was normal, with questions about projects on the resume. I was called on-site two weeks later. The questions were: * Divide by 2 clock * Divide by 3 clock * FIFO read/write rates for equilibrium * 3-bit Gray code counter * Low p
They are very urgent. No phone interview. Call me on the day around noon and want me to be on-site on the same day about 4:30 pm.
I received an interview invitation after sending my application via the career page. The one-hour interview started directly with questions, with no proper introduction or small talk. Interviews are opportunities for both sides, the interviewee and