Interns were spread out throughout the company and were all given meaningful projects that genuinely contributed to the company. My mentor was very helpful, and I felt well supported in general. The office in Boulder was a fun place. Pay is competitive with other tech internships. Perks include a 2-day, expense-covered trip to California to visit the company headquarters, meet the other interns, and surf on the beach.
The internship program is still relatively new (this was only its second year), so they were figuring some stuff out on the fly. They seem to have done that pretty well.
Very reasonable interview process. More focused on understanding your thought process than super hard algo questions. The “System Design” round was actually just an OOP round. Interviewers were all very professional.
I zoomed in for an informational interview with a manager. The interview began with a very boring 45-minute lecture, whiteboard and all, about the company, which I sat through without saying anything. Then I talked about a project I worked on, and th
I was sent a 30-minute code challenge with hidden test cases, and I failed it. My code worked for 6 out of 8 test cases, but it wouldn't show me which edge cases I failed to account for, so I couldn't submit a full solution.
Very reasonable interview process. More focused on understanding your thought process than super hard algo questions. The “System Design” round was actually just an OOP round. Interviewers were all very professional.
I zoomed in for an informational interview with a manager. The interview began with a very boring 45-minute lecture, whiteboard and all, about the company, which I sat through without saying anything. Then I talked about a project I worked on, and th
I was sent a 30-minute code challenge with hidden test cases, and I failed it. My code worked for 6 out of 8 test cases, but it wouldn't show me which edge cases I failed to account for, so I couldn't submit a full solution.