I applied through an employee referral. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Intel Corporation
Interview
We had a 30ish minute phone interview where they asked me to talk a bit about myself, then about resume experience and projects, and one of my projects in technical detail (just "how does it work" but explaining as in depth as I could). Then they asked me a bunch of technical questions related to computer architecture / virutal memory; stuff you'd get quizzed on in school. Then a few questions at the end.
A few weeks later, I had a virtual onsite interview scheduled, meaning it would've been onsite if COVID weren't a thing. I had 3 virtual meetings throughout the day where I was asked some stuff about myself/interests/experience, more in detail talking about work/project experience, and a few technical questions. Some were quiz-like questions and one of them would've been a whiteboard problem in person, but I just explained the solution verbally. Then they asked me stuff about myself and if I had questions about the job / company. One of them was just 30 minutes of me asking questions because the technical part was over quick, but he have really long responses so I only had to ask like 5 or 6.
Then I got an email asking me to re-apply because they changed the Job ID of the role, another asking for consent for a background check a few days later, and another one scheduling a talk to discuss the offer.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Given a buffer of bytes representing a list of elements of some arbitrary type, return a list of each unique element paired with its frequency of occurrence in the original list, in descending order of the frequency.
I applied online. I interviewed at Intel Corporation
Interview
The interview process included something like 3 technical interviews. The first interview consisted of riddles, basic coding questions (strings, arryas, linked lists etc.) and algorithms questions, like BFS, DFS and more basic stuff.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
A windowless room contains three identical light fixtures, each containing an identical light bulb or light globe. Each light is connected to one of three switches outside of the room. Each bulb is switched off at present. You are outside the room, and the door is closed. Before opening the door you may play around with the light switches as many times as you like. But once you've opened the door, you may no longer touch a switch. After this, you go into the room and examine the lights. How can you tell which switch goes to which light?
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Intel Corporation (Bengaluru) in Aug 2021
Interview
First round was a technical round.
It was of 2 hours video interview. There were 3 panels who took my interview. Question were from React Js, C#, SQL.
I had cleared the first round and I went to second round which was a behavioural round.
The person who took my interview was very rude and unprofessional. I have no words to describe his so worst behaviour.
I was not selected in second round.