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      Búsquedas relacionadas: Evaluaciones de Analog Devices | Empleos en Analog Devices | Sueldos en Analog Devices | Prestaciones en Analog Devices
      Entrevistas en Analog DevicesEntrevistas para el cargo de Senior Front End Engineer en Analog DevicesEntrevista en Analog Devices


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      Entrevista para Senior Front End Engineer

      3 de jul de 2025
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Boston, MA
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia negativa
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Me postulé a través de una recomendación de un empleado. El proceso tomó 2 meses. Acudí a una entrevista en Analog Devices (Boston, MA) en mar 2025

      Entrevista

      In late March 2025, I began interviewing for a Senior Front-End Engineer position at Analog Garage, a corporate incubator within Analog Devices (ADI). I had reached out to someone I know at ADI, which led to securing my first interview. The process took a little less then two months. The initial interview was a one-hour conversation with an engineering manager at the Garage. We started by discussing my background and experience. Around halfway in the conversation shifted to general computer science questions; for example, “What’s the difference between a process and a thread?” and “When should you use a linked list versus an array?” Most of the questions didn’t feel tailored to a front-end engineering role and leaned more toward classic comp-sci fundamentals. I advanced to the next stage, which was a take-home project. It took about a week for the team to finalize the requirements. The core task was to use a modern front-end framework to visualize real-time data over WebSockets, with a backend provided. I was excited about the opportunity, so I invested a lot of time into the project and was genuinely happy with the result. I submitted the project about a week later. Nearly two weeks later, I heard back that I would be moving forward to the next round: a 2.5-hour onsite interview. It would include two parts: A 15-minute presentation about myself, open to anyone at the company. A panel interview focused on the take-home project, including potential feedback and minor changes. I was explicitly told that there would be no live coding, other than potentially making changes to the submitted project. The hiring manager was out on vacation, and I was given the option to wait for their return. Since I wasn’t in a rush and liked communicating with them so far, I agreed to wait the full two weeks. Unfortunately, the day before the interview, I was informed there had been a scheduling mix-up; the hiring manager would actually be returning the day after my interview. Since I had been told there would be no live coding, I focused my preparation on the presentation and follow-up questions about the take-home project. I had just started applying to roles, so my live coding practice (e.g., LeetCode-style problems) was a very rusty. The onsite interview started with the 15-minute presentation, which went smoothly. Then came the panel. The first 15 minutes went as expected; we discussed my take-home project. But then, unexpectedly, I was presented with a HackerRank-style coding challenge: to take a deeply nested object and convert it into a string in a specific format. I struggled with it. I was caught completely off guard, having been told explicitly there would be no live coding component. A few days later, I was informed that I didn’t get the job. I was pretty disappointed; not because of the rejection itself, but because I had spent a significant amount of time on the process and would have prepared differently had I known there could even be a chance of live coding. It felt disrespectful and misleading. I sent a email to the hiring manager explaining that the interview did, in fact, include live coding despite being told otherwise. The hiring manager responded and apologized for the miscommunication.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      When should you use a linked list vs array
      Responder pregunta
      1

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