Great engineering culture. A lot of resources for learning and development.
Strong company values (e.g., "be kind") that people take seriously.
Many informal cross-functional learning opportunities.
Cons will depend on what you are looking for. If you are looking for fast development/launch cycles, that is harder to do in health tech.
I had an online assessment first after applying. After I passed it, there was a pair programming session with one of their engineers. The online assessment was more difficult; the pair programming was more practical.
A very long and weird process. You do all the interviews together, and then you get the results at the end. You might not get hired because of the feedback from any interview, but you still do all of them. I find that such a waste of time.
1. Online Application 2. Take a home assignment. It was a HackerRank coding challenge having three coding challenges. It can ask for coding involving multithreading. You will get 1 hour 40 minutes.
I had an online assessment first after applying. After I passed it, there was a pair programming session with one of their engineers. The online assessment was more difficult; the pair programming was more practical.
A very long and weird process. You do all the interviews together, and then you get the results at the end. You might not get hired because of the feedback from any interview, but you still do all of them. I find that such a waste of time.
1. Online Application 2. Take a home assignment. It was a HackerRank coding challenge having three coding challenges. It can ask for coding involving multithreading. You will get 1 hour 40 minutes.