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      Búsquedas relacionadas: Evaluaciones de Apple | Empleos en Apple | Sueldos en Apple | Prestaciones en Apple
      Entrevistas en AppleEntrevistas para el cargo de Java Developer en AppleEntrevista en Apple


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      Entrevista para Java Developer

      17 ago 2012
      Empleado anónimo
      Cupertino, CA
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Me postulé a través de una facultad o universidad. El proceso tomó más de 1 semana. Acudí a una entrevista en Apple (Cupertino, CA) en ene 2011

      Entrevista

      The hiring process is long. I applied for a summer internship at the fall career fair in September of 2010. They said I would hear back in 2-4 weeks. Long story short, I never heard back.... I was a little bummed but got over it and by this time it was January. I got an email from a recruiter at Apple *telling me* that my 30-minute phone interview was the next day with a PM of the group I was assigned (you don't really get a choice in what group you get; they pick you). So I took the interview and had a great time with it actually. It was extremely pleasant and easy to talk/interview with this guy. We ended up chatting for about 90 minutes. Most of it was about my past experiences and projects (from *updated* resume I emailed the recruiter the previous day). I am very passionate so that came across which got him excited too, causing us to go off on tangents. I also knew my stuff (hint hint). The other bit of the call was focused on my ideas/visions for the product (I worked in iTunes developing iTunes Match). Coincidently they were either similar or outside-the-box to my interviewer's ideas (remember this is before iCloud, etc). Ultimately this was a screener interview to get a feel for me: asking about my life, experience, future goals, and ideas. Straightforward and easy. I got an email 3 hours later from the recruiter telling me I did very well and they wanted to bring me out to meet the team and do an on-site interview. This one was supposed to take an hour. It was scheduled a week from that same day. I was working in SF at the time so they put me on their Wi-Fi & Leather-Seated Coach bus down to Cupertino for the interview (first time at Apple!) and went to meet the team. I met everyone and it was social for 20 minutes and then myself, the team leader, and his senior developer went to his office for the "technical" interview. There were two simple algorithm questions about efficient tree traversal and then the remaining time we chatted about what I wanted to work on which was "Music in the Cloud" (I didn't know they were already beginning to implement it :P). Then they had a meeting so I left, still kind of dazed about how sudden all this was.... That same night of my on-site interview, I got an email from the recruiter asking to talk for 15 minutes the next day about my summer plans, etc. which ultimately became Internship Offer - working on iTunes Match --- yeah baby!! tl;dr -- Applied at career fair for apple internship in September; didn't hear anything until January 3rd... ~4 months -- They scheduled a phone interview for next day; focus on my past projects, etc (including details!!). Also talked about my ideas/thoughts for the groups' product... 1 day to schedule phone interview; interview took about 60-90 minutes (supposed to only be 30 minutes tho). -- They scheduled an on-site interview and meet&greet for one week later. Took a little over an hour: ~20min w/ team; ~40min w/ team leader (20min algorithm questions, 20min on "what I want to do in the group and why")... this interview was scheduled 3 hours after my phone interview; took a little over an hour on site at Apple's campus in cupertino -- I received an email that same night to talk to my recruiter the next day; got offer... this phone call was scheduled few hours after my on-site interview; phone call w/ recruiter took 15 minutes and got offer; they gave me a month and a half to accept or decline offer. -- Accepted and interned at apple that summer OVERALL: Interview process is VERY fast. From first them first contacting me to my getting an offer was less than two weeks. That being said, I didn't hear a word from them for 4 months and they were impossible to get a hold of to ask about progress. I've worked for three "big" tech companies and a halfdozen startups and Apples hiring technique was the most efficient, straightforward, no b*ll-sh*t process I've gone through. Other notes: -- Interns are paid hourly wages; they pay overtime at time&half -- Interns do get a monthly housing stipend -- Interns get relocation assistance(flights, etc); My buddies and I drove from MIT to MountainView and Apple paid for ALL of it (hotel, food, gas, oil, etc). -- There is a profit-sharing/stock-purchase-system for non-intern employees -- LIVE IN THE CITY; S. Bay is very suburban and residential. Apple has shuttles all over Bay Area that run all day. The city coaches are leather seats, wi-fi, etc and are about 1 hour drive (worth it! you can wake up, read some hackernews, tackle some email, and then you're at work and ready to go.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      In general this process was anything but difficult; it wasn't easy but they didn't drill you on ridiculous, unrelated questions. I guess I was really surprised by how deep in discussion we got regarding my past projects, thinking of new or better features, alternative use-cases, all my decisions (why I used java, or arduino, or the color blue). I was definitely surprised by what should have been a 30 minute phone call turning into a 90 minute call - focusing mostly on the details, implementations, and future potential of my past projects and work. So make sure you know what you did AND why you did it!!! Good luck ;)
      Responder pregunta
      16

      Otras evaluaciones sobre las entrevistas para el cargo de Java Developer en Apple

      Entrevista para Software Engineer - Java Developer

      9 abr 2026
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Austin, TX
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Apple (Austin, TX)

      Entrevista

      In total, I had a comprehensive 6-round interview process, which included 1 technical screening and a 5-round panel interview. The rounds covered LeetCode problem-solving, behavioral assessment, hands-on bug fixing, and an in-depth system design evaluation

      Entrevista para Software Engineer - Java Developer

      23 ene 2024
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Me postulé en línea. Acudí a una entrevista en Apple

      Entrevista

      There were multiple rounds of coding interview and System Design based questions. The coding rounds vary from medium to difficult. Practicing LeetCode regularly would help. Strong Knowledge on Data Structures and Algorithms is a plus for these interviews.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      To verify if a string is palindrome or not.
      Responder pregunta

      Entrevista para Java Software Engineer

      14 oct 2019
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sunnyvale, CA
      Oferta rechazada
      Experiencia negativa
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Me postulé en persona. El proceso tomó 3 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Apple (Sunnyvale, CA) en sep 2019

      Entrevista

      I interviewed with Apple in September 2019. I had a total of 5 rounds. One 1 hour telephonic and four onsite rounds of 1 hour each. I had a competitive offer from a similar level organization. I informed them about my other offer and they immediately decided to move ahead with me for a full-time position. I was more than happy to receive an offer from FAANG until I searched on google about ETS org which falls under IS&T. I read so bad reviews on Blind, Quora and Glassdoor also spoke to a few of my friends at Apple. Then, I came to know this is a bad org at Apple. When the Apple recruiter asked me about other offer details, I gave him the numbers. They equalized my offer with another company. They gave me an ICT3 offer. Also, when I started negotiating, they started demeaning the other org from where I had got the offer. This is highly unprofessional. However, I accepted the verbal offer. After a week, they altered my offer, reducing the base by 5K and asked me if I was ok. what kind of ethical behavior is that? They released the offer letter They gave me 48 hours to accept the apple offer. Meanwhile, I got an offer from one of the FAANG companies and asked them to raise TC again, considering the fact that they demeaned my earlier company, now that I have got an offer from a similar level company, they should consider. After the discussion, they rescinded my offer without letting me know!!! After writing 2-4 emails as to why I can't access my offer letter, they let me know that you are not a good fit for our organization!! Just because I have 3 offers from FAANG level companies and trying to negotiate, they feel I am not the right fit. No wonder I see so many bad reviews of IS&T org. Such a pathetic organization!! They literally promote incompetence.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Multithreading interview questions
      Responder pregunta