The buildings are great, and the landscaping is well maintained.
The company is right now nothing but a well-decorated trash can. From the outside, the look is superb, but from the inside, it is completely rotten.
The place is super rife with politics, and unless you can play the political game well, you will not even get a decent review. The place is filled with managers who want to just save their jobs and don't care a hoot about anything else.
The Vanity Fair article "Microsoft's Lost Decade" captures the dismal state of the company very accurately. In fact, Redmond operations are still better; the Indian operations are way too worse.
No VP cares about the Indian operations, and the managers here are having a gala time for the past 10 years, taking up only useless projects which are easy to deliver and help them to keep their jobs.
There is absolutely zero career growth for anyone, and there are people at age 44 and above stuck at development lead levels. Now, these people have gotten so accustomed to this culture that they neither want to move from their positions nor wish to create space for anyone else. Also, they take out their career-related frustrations on their subordinates.
A manager's word is final in a review process, and there is no way you can contest it.
Everything is top-down, and there is zero scope for bottom-up innovation. I was absolutely amazed when I took some new ideas to my development manager, and he said he was too old to connect with such latest ideas connecting new technologies in the market. I never went to him with another idea and resigned from my job.
All this internal churn is definitely showing up with lackluster releases (read Win 8) and failed product lines (tablets, phones).
In fact, when I joined the company, IE was the market leader with >90% share of the browser market. Now, it is a shame that Chrome has overtaken it in the browser game.
The company is, as usual, surviving on Office and Enterprise. A day someone hits the Office suite, Microsoft's game is over.
Mr. Ballmer, if you have any decency left in you, please step down. You and your incompetent subordinates are ruining the company.
Microsoft Interview process Off Campus through college. Round 1: Online coding questions (Eliminatory round). Technical round - 2. Round 1: Online Coding solving. Round 2: HR + Coding.
A big benefit of using linked lists is that nodes are stored wherever there is free space in memory. The nodes do not have to be stored contiguously, right after each other, like elements are stored in arrays. Another advantage of linked lists is th
2 Coding rounds with optional language. You need to cover corner cases. System design question on file systems. Previous experience discussion - what could have been better. Machine learning question.
Microsoft Interview process Off Campus through college. Round 1: Online coding questions (Eliminatory round). Technical round - 2. Round 1: Online Coding solving. Round 2: HR + Coding.
A big benefit of using linked lists is that nodes are stored wherever there is free space in memory. The nodes do not have to be stored contiguously, right after each other, like elements are stored in arrays. Another advantage of linked lists is th
2 Coding rounds with optional language. You need to cover corner cases. System design question on file systems. Previous experience discussion - what could have been better. Machine learning question.