J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 4 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez a2z Development Center (Irvine, CA) en févr. 2013
Entretien
1 phone interview followed by on site call. Phone call question was a basic coding problem on arrays and some knowledge based questions. The onsite was with 5 interviewers- 3 of them asked coding, object oriented questions followed by a behavioral/lunch interview and finally, a resume-based/behavioral interview.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Print a 2d-character matrix in spiral order, design a chess game, Identify patterns in a 2d-boolean matrix.
J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 5 jours. J'ai passé un entretien chez a2z Development Center (Irvine, CA) en mars 2014
Entretien
5 interviews, lasting all day. Ridiculous academic-type algorithm questions... nothing that would be useful in the real world as a software engineer. It seemed more geared toward a new college graduate than someone with real world experience. Complete waste of time, for me at least. This position was supposed to be for a level 2 or 3 software engineer but there wasn't a single question related to anything I've worked on in 8 years as a SWE.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Algorithms, algorithms, algorithms... all functional type stuff, no OO stuff that people use everyday in the software engineering world. Seemed like all academic type questions and not real-world uses.
J'ai postulé via un établissement d'enseignement supérieur ou universitaire. J'ai passé un entretien chez a2z Development Center en mai 2012
Entretien
Applied through their website, they also came to our college for a info session and collected resumes. Later I received a mail from them to schedule two back to back phone interviews each 30 mins long. One of it was a programming exercise and other was a technical interview with lot of ques on datastructures.