Compensation is pretty good if you compare level-wise.
You work extremely hard, with no work-life balance. They always make you feel like you should be sorry for not working harder. Deadlines are impossible to meet. There's no software infrastructure to support development; it's basically a hardware company.
There are no compute instances and no end-to-end tests (seriously?). The CI is very basic.
You need fresh blood, refresh the management level, and remove obstacles for developers.
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
Talked to GL and explained what I do at my job. Had a brief explanation of what they do in his team. It was a pleasant talk. HR was not as professional as the manager. They rescheduled the interview multiple times and across multiple sites. The inte
Hour and a half. Second technical interview. Two interviewers. 1. Asked to write a C function that multiplies polynomials. 2. Asked about writing the solution for the classic integral query problem in C++.
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
Talked to GL and explained what I do at my job. Had a brief explanation of what they do in his team. It was a pleasant talk. HR was not as professional as the manager. They rescheduled the interview multiple times and across multiple sites. The inte
Hour and a half. Second technical interview. Two interviewers. 1. Asked to write a C function that multiplies polynomials. 2. Asked about writing the solution for the classic integral query problem in C++.