There is a lot of cool stuff happening as this company reinvents itself from just pushing pixels to pushing data around everywhere. NVIDIA is very open internally, so it's very easy to see the level of excitement flowing around. It's nice to generally know about what's happening around you, too.
NVIDIA is organized to pinch pennies, be it in the compute infrastructure or in employee compensation. Everybody works very hard, but compensation is subpar for the industry. Benefits (401k matching?) similarly lack.
Applied online and was reached out to within a week. Had two rounds of online interviews, then received a rejection. Questions covered standard computer architecture topics and some cache-specific inquiries. Interconnects were also discussed.
The interview was smooth and easy to understand. It took me 45 minutes. The employer is an engineer who worked for 10 years. They provided all technical questions, with only 2 for coding.
It started with a first call with the team manager, where he asked about basic multiplier and FSM questions. Second round with a team member involved latch inference questions and a palindrome problem.
Applied online and was reached out to within a week. Had two rounds of online interviews, then received a rejection. Questions covered standard computer architecture topics and some cache-specific inquiries. Interconnects were also discussed.
The interview was smooth and easy to understand. It took me 45 minutes. The employer is an engineer who worked for 10 years. They provided all technical questions, with only 2 for coding.
It started with a first call with the team manager, where he asked about basic multiplier and FSM questions. Second round with a team member involved latch inference questions and a palindrome problem.