NVIDIA will challenge you as an engineer. There is lots to learn. There is a variety of different projects which grow engineering breadth. The team culture can be very org-dependent.
Sometimes, the long-term direction is not clear or changes very fast. The pro of this is that engineers can have a meaningful say in direction or architecture.
Prioritize lowering tech debt, building good long-term systems instead of always rushing for the next deliverable.
I was contacted by a recruiter after applying. Then, all correspondence seemed like boilerplate scheduling emails; I don't think the recruiter/scheduler spent any time crafting custom responses. I did an initial informational/technical screening, fo
The first process is talking to the manager. He will talk to you about the position and what the group does. Then, ask what experience you have that is common.
Applied through LinkedIn. Had an initial phone screen that went in-depth into ML theory. The interviewer was friendly and gave me lots of hints, but I felt that I didn't do well.
I was contacted by a recruiter after applying. Then, all correspondence seemed like boilerplate scheduling emails; I don't think the recruiter/scheduler spent any time crafting custom responses. I did an initial informational/technical screening, fo
The first process is talking to the manager. He will talk to you about the position and what the group does. Then, ask what experience you have that is common.
Applied through LinkedIn. Had an initial phone screen that went in-depth into ML theory. The interviewer was friendly and gave me lots of hints, but I felt that I didn't do well.