Me postulé en línea. El proceso tomó 2 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Deem (Foster City, CA) en abr 2009
Entrevista
The phone technical screens were straightforward (as they asked some basic, intermediate and advanced Java questions, as well as general questions on HTTP and servlets).
I had two on-site interviews, each lasting about 2-3 hours. The format for each interviewer was to ask a IQ puzzler and then a coding question. The IQ questions were: tossing two eggs off a building (a popular question lifted from Google's repertoire), computing the angle between the minute and hour hands of a clock and devising a way for representing VCR+ codes in a small amount of bits (yes I know, quite retro but a decent question). The Java questions themselves are not particularly difficult, although they did ask an open-ended OO-design question asking how to design an elevator system.
Round One actually went reasonably well for me, so they called me in for round two. Sadly, I was doomed from the start: for a reason that is inexplicable to me - the interviewer's mannerism made it clear that he did not approve of my candidacy. Despite the fact that I was able to implement a hash table from scratch using only Java primitives and explain how to make it thread-safe (we are talking basic stuff here). But, when I asked him about the corporate culture of Rearden Commerce his bias against me became clear when he responded: "We are *results* driven". His tone of voice suggested that somehow he concluded that I am somehow not results driven. My past experience, rave reviews and monotonically increasing salary history begs to differ.
Needless to say: I did not receive an offer from this company. And until clairvoyance has been proven as a valid tool for interviewers, be prepared for such unprofessionalism if you interview with Rearden Commerce. Speaking of unprofessionalism, a hiring manager also admitted to me that the MO of engineers at this company is to tell their coworkers "your code sucks!". Perhaps I should consider myself spared.
Preguntas de entrevista [2]
Pregunta 1
Compute the angle between the hour and minute hands of a clock.
Me postulé en línea. El proceso tomó 2 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Deem (Dublín, Dublín) en may 2021
Entrevista
After applying online I had a first round interview with HR. It was a very casual conversation about the role and the company. The next round was a technical coding interview. I completed the challenge within 15 minutes and the interviewer then proceeded to grill me on design and architecture questions that he didn't even know the answer to. When I asked him if any of this was relevant to the job or similar to any duties I would have to perform he said no. I think they want someone who is way overqualified for the job listed but only want to pay entry level salary. The interviewer also mentioned that they can be expected to do a huge amount of overtime. I withdrew my application after the coding interview as I did not want to work for a company that does not believe in work life balance.
Me postulé a través de una recomendación de un empleado. El proceso tomó 2 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Deem (Bengaluru)
Entrevista
First interview was telephonic....after clearing the telephonic round,there was a technical round .After clearing technical around i was interviewed with senior management and then had a discussion with HR about package