I had an on-campus interview with Microsoft a few weeks after the career fair, when I had given them my resume.
This interview had only one pretty basic technical question. After that, I received a call a week later stating they wanted to fly me out to Seattle for further interviews.
I flew out there about two weeks later. Many other candidates were interviewing for both internship and full-time positions.
The night before the interviews, there was a bowling event with food. It was pretty cool.
For the next day, we were separated into a morning group and an afternoon group. I was in the afternoon group, which consisted of four 45-minute interviews with various members of the specific team with which I was interviewing. Everyone was pretty personable and very helpful.
Throughout the course of the interviews, I was able to get a sense that I wasn't exactly what they were looking for, but not in a bad way. It felt more like a "remember this for next time" situation.
Remove a node from a singly linked list.
Concatenate two strings, replacing every space or set of multiple spaces with a single dash.
Given a string of characters, figure out how many palindromes are in the list of words.
You have two results from a database query. Check if they return the same thing.
The following metrics were computed from 6 interview experiences for the Microsoft Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) Intern role in Redmond, Washington.
Microsoft's interview process for their Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) Intern roles in Redmond, Washington is incredibly easy as the vast majority of engineers get an offer after going through it.
Candidates reported having very good feelings for Microsoft's Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) Intern interview process in Redmond, Washington.