Industry company, not SW-Dev-SAAS something. They build products that you can touch. Occasionally, it requires some SW development. If you want this, go for it. Not for everyone, though.
Too much bureaucracy. Buying the electronic SW license can take six months. That kills any prototyping attempts, as you can't start a project quickly.
I applied for the Kubernetes Operator Developer role. An IT representative called me and informed me that HR would contact me back. I waited all week, but received no response.
The interview process had two stages, both of which were video interviews. The main forms of questions involved writing C++ code, debugging C++ code, answering computer memory-related questions, and some questions about Unix/Linux commands.
The process begins with submitting your application through Siemens’ career portal or job boards. HR conducts an initial phone or video screening to review your background, motivation for joining Siemens, and basic technical qualifications.
I applied for the Kubernetes Operator Developer role. An IT representative called me and informed me that HR would contact me back. I waited all week, but received no response.
The interview process had two stages, both of which were video interviews. The main forms of questions involved writing C++ code, debugging C++ code, answering computer memory-related questions, and some questions about Unix/Linux commands.
The process begins with submitting your application through Siemens’ career portal or job boards. HR conducts an initial phone or video screening to review your background, motivation for joining Siemens, and basic technical qualifications.