Friendly environment with basics like a workout area, showers, lunch area, and a few shared cubicles with microwaves scattered about. Cubicles if you like them.
Cubicles, if you don't like them.
Software (at least in my project) was far beyond complex, much more than needed. Struggling to go agile, fighting the fires constantly coming up never allowed us to progress much away from a waterfall/agile hybrid. A day when the automated tests actually passed was rare.
Focus more on fixing the development process, and the number of fires will decrease.
The first interview and a HackerRank challenge took place in October, about a month after a career fair. The interviewer was super kind, and the coding challenge was not too difficult. The second interview didn't happen until December. It included a
I met a recruiter at a job fair at school and only had an onsite interview after that. The interview was 5 hours long, and each hour I met with a different engineer to talk about a different language.
It was online, and the interviewer asked a lot of OS, CN, DBMS, and OOPS concepts. He was chill, but they valued depth a lot and wanted answers in depth. It was held for 45 minutes to 1 hour.
The first interview and a HackerRank challenge took place in October, about a month after a career fair. The interviewer was super kind, and the coding challenge was not too difficult. The second interview didn't happen until December. It included a
I met a recruiter at a job fair at school and only had an onsite interview after that. The interview was 5 hours long, and each hour I met with a different engineer to talk about a different language.
It was online, and the interviewer asked a lot of OS, CN, DBMS, and OOPS concepts. He was chill, but they valued depth a lot and wanted answers in depth. It was held for 45 minutes to 1 hour.