EB1A I140 PP DIY approved after RFE in 2 days# Immigration - 落地生根
w*n
1 楼
Sorry cannot type Chinese in office.
Yesterday Google on-site. Cannot talk about real interview questions but
still like to share some experience.
1. I had 5 technical interviews instead of 4 as HR told me in the email
confirmation. So be prepared to changes. Also get good rest it is a long
battle!
2. Questions are not terribly hard, just basic algorithms and data
structures, but tricky. My suggestion is when get stuck, try to think of
some properties you might missed.
3. Questions cover a wide range as well. The interviewers as a whole will
make sure every aspect is probed. So you may want to study everything at
least a little bit, e.g. system, concurrency, OO.
4. A lot of open-ended questions, possibly mixed with coding. One good
practice is: ask about the interviewer's background upfront, so at least you
know your solution will be on the right track.
5. Practice writing on a whiteboard before you go. Have a good floorplan of
the board, e.g., code, example, illustrations.
6. All my interviewers are super nice. I didn't have Indian guy though. But
my suggestion is don't panic if get stuck and keep thinking hard and talking
. My first question during the day is a little trickier and I ended up
writing then removing my code several times before I got the right algorithm
. The interviewer seemed fine with it. Finally I got the time to do the
second question and had about 10 minutes to chat with him in the end.
Above are all my personal experience. The only thing I can guarantee is it
is real and please don't take my advice unless you really think the same way
. I am not responsible for anything.
Good luck to everyone~~
Yesterday Google on-site. Cannot talk about real interview questions but
still like to share some experience.
1. I had 5 technical interviews instead of 4 as HR told me in the email
confirmation. So be prepared to changes. Also get good rest it is a long
battle!
2. Questions are not terribly hard, just basic algorithms and data
structures, but tricky. My suggestion is when get stuck, try to think of
some properties you might missed.
3. Questions cover a wide range as well. The interviewers as a whole will
make sure every aspect is probed. So you may want to study everything at
least a little bit, e.g. system, concurrency, OO.
4. A lot of open-ended questions, possibly mixed with coding. One good
practice is: ask about the interviewer's background upfront, so at least you
know your solution will be on the right track.
5. Practice writing on a whiteboard before you go. Have a good floorplan of
the board, e.g., code, example, illustrations.
6. All my interviewers are super nice. I didn't have Indian guy though. But
my suggestion is don't panic if get stuck and keep thinking hard and talking
. My first question during the day is a little trickier and I ended up
writing then removing my code several times before I got the right algorithm
. The interviewer seemed fine with it. Finally I got the time to do the
second question and had about 10 minutes to chat with him in the end.
Above are all my personal experience. The only thing I can guarantee is it
is real and please don't take my advice unless you really think the same way
. I am not responsible for anything.
Good luck to everyone~~