El proceso tomó 1 semana. Acudí a una entrevista en Epic en oct 2011
Entrevista
For some reasons, I didn't have to take the local programming test like most people had to.
Credentials: PhD, involved in multiple open source projects.
1) Resume submission - campus career fair.
2) Phone interview - A software developer called and discussed prior experience listed on my resume. Nothing technical. I explained what programming experience I had in the past, including a list of open source projects I was involved in.
3) Rembrandt test - basic math and personality-type questions.
4) Onsite interview - very standard and very well explained by other candidates here.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
Standard questions like most have mentioned here: string manipulation, calendar.
Acudí a una entrevista en Epic (San Francisco, CA)
Entrevista
Medium level leetcode and then a very basic system design question as a final round interview. Overall, smooth and simple process. Only one technical and it was the first one.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
How would you design a system to minimize wait time at a health care center?
[OA] OA was fair. Programming part are leetcode easy and easy-mediums, straightforward simulation, backtracking, dfs, strings, etc. No DP/graphs but ymmv.
[Final interview] (Case Study) I think the interviewer came up with their own prompt. It's mostly discussion-based, with a virtual white board. It's not too technical. I'm guessing its testing your communication/logical reasoning than system design skills. (Pair programming) 1 question, same format as the OA on the same platform, leetcode easy.
[Overall] Technical difficulty isn't bad. Interviewers who are current software devs seemed friendly. Had a good experience, yet got rejected.
First round is a thirty minute phone call with one of their developers. The other part of the first round is a three hour exam with IQ test style logic questions and coding questions.