My experience while at VMware was good. I didn't get much experience with Broadcom before they laid me off.
They have good sales at the moment, but it's unclear how they will handle growing competition, especially from hyperscalers. (For VMware, less so Broadcom).
Directly onsite. As I already had 3+ years of experience in the Networking Industry, I was interviewing for the Data Center ASIC group. There were 5 (1-on-1) technical interviews: 1. Difference between C and scripting languages. 2. Number of 1's i
An external recruiter, cooperating with the company, approached me and organized phone interviews, travel, and a face-to-face interview. The telephone interview lasted about an hour. Half of the time was spent introducing me to the company by a mana
I was contacted by the director of the team, for which I responded. Then there was no follow-up for a month. When I texted back, I got a call, and a telephonic interview was scheduled to be taken by an engineer on his team for a vague time the same
Directly onsite. As I already had 3+ years of experience in the Networking Industry, I was interviewing for the Data Center ASIC group. There were 5 (1-on-1) technical interviews: 1. Difference between C and scripting languages. 2. Number of 1's i
An external recruiter, cooperating with the company, approached me and organized phone interviews, travel, and a face-to-face interview. The telephone interview lasted about an hour. Half of the time was spent introducing me to the company by a mana
I was contacted by the director of the team, for which I responded. Then there was no follow-up for a month. When I texted back, I got a call, and a telephonic interview was scheduled to be taken by an engineer on his team for a vague time the same