Average compensation, great benefits, and pretty stable. Lots of people have been here for +10 years.
As long as you don't end up in a project led by a team or management from India, it's a great place.
If you do, however, be prepared for a lot of unreasonable demands, working with tech and processes that are 10 years behind, and being a full-time firefighter.
It seems that the management team in India is generally more interested in hiring tons of Indians and creating a bad product (which, in turn, necessarily requires more people to maintain) than creating good products that don't need 300+ people to maintain and push forward.
Really, it's a complete patch job where they just keep kicking as many cans as they can down the road while actively seeking more cans to kick.
First, it asked about basic information about me and my life history. Then, it talked about data structure types with examples requiring some inquiry and thinking. Next, it asked a few coding problems with C++. I had to implement, notify some errors,
Started with a quick introduction, followed by a bunch of problem-solving questions, and ended with a lot of technical questions. They let you read lines of code that you'll have to explain and optimize. Overall, many questions were about data stru
This was for a role that has both Networking and Python Programming/Automation - a student co-op. They grilled me on Networking to the core, mostly theory, focusing on routing protocols. This was because I had explained that I had worked for network
First, it asked about basic information about me and my life history. Then, it talked about data structure types with examples requiring some inquiry and thinking. Next, it asked a few coding problems with C++. I had to implement, notify some errors,
Started with a quick introduction, followed by a bunch of problem-solving questions, and ended with a lot of technical questions. They let you read lines of code that you'll have to explain and optimize. Overall, many questions were about data stru
This was for a role that has both Networking and Python Programming/Automation - a student co-op. They grilled me on Networking to the core, mostly theory, focusing on routing protocols. This was because I had explained that I had worked for network