There were 3 technical rounds (LC, general knowledge, sys design) followed by 1 BQ. The coding questions were relatively simple, a mix of easy-medium on LC. They would ask on general knowledge as well (e.g. TCP vs UDP, use case for OS 'a' file mode, some questions on tools you used before in your resume). Systems design was a little more difficult but nothing crazy. Though I've heard bad stories, interviewers in my case were all very professional and welcoming. Only weird part was the final round where they try to pimp your ego and sell you on the basis the interview you had "aced" was very difficult compared to FAANG and blabla. (yea, nope, let's not kid ourselves) (maybe long ago before their mass hiring phase) The pitch would have been more convincing otherwise without the disconnect.
The entire interview processes was a recruiter call plus three rounds of technical interviews. Interviewers were friendly. Technical coding questions and work related questions were asked based on your past work experiences. Each interview saved time for the candidate to ask questions.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Technical questions related to past work experiences.
Scheduled with recruiter. Scheduled and interviewed. It was well organized. Interviewer are good. HR, manager, hiring manager. Some of the interview organized around 8pm. Some of the interview organized around 8pm.
The interview process was well-structured and relatively efficient. It typically consisted of multiple rounds:
Online assessment / initial screening: Focused on data structures and algorithms, with medium-to-hard LeetCode-style problems.
Technical interviews (2–3 rounds): Covered core computer science fundamentals (data structures, algorithms, system design basics), along with problem-solving and coding in real time. Interviewers also asked follow-up questions to evaluate depth of understanding and optimization.
Project discussion: Detailed discussion of past projects, including design decisions, trade-offs, and real-world impact.
HR / behavioral round: Focused on communication skills, teamwork, and cultural fit.
Overall, the process emphasized strong coding ability, solid fundamentals, and the ability to think clearly under pressure. Interviewers were generally professional, though the difficulty level was on the higher side, especially for algorithm questions.