This is my first job after my Masters and I thoroughly enjoy my job. You get to come up with your own ideas and implement them. Agile development process is really good.
We also get 10% of the time that we can use on the projects we like.
There are no real downsides as such that I can find. Probably we can have better food in the cafeteria.
I had my first Java technical interview on a video call. The questions were basic - about OOP, exceptions, async calls, Spring IOC, and certain Spring annotations. After that, I received a task and three days to do it. The task was about building a q
I was reached out to by an awesome Intuit Recruiter, Aleksandra Kesser, on LinkedIn. **Round 1: Standard Phone Screen** Questions on Data Structures and Algorithms. After the Tech Screen Round, the next step was the "craft round," which consisted o
Craft demo interview: Intuit shares an open-ended problem with you, for which you have to create a working explanation and also give a code walkthrough to the interview panel.
I had my first Java technical interview on a video call. The questions were basic - about OOP, exceptions, async calls, Spring IOC, and certain Spring annotations. After that, I received a task and three days to do it. The task was about building a q
I was reached out to by an awesome Intuit Recruiter, Aleksandra Kesser, on LinkedIn. **Round 1: Standard Phone Screen** Questions on Data Structures and Algorithms. After the Tech Screen Round, the next step was the "craft round," which consisted o
Craft demo interview: Intuit shares an open-ended problem with you, for which you have to create a working explanation and also give a code walkthrough to the interview panel.