Slappers Only
Junior Member
We all shall fall.
brotkasten said:I've heard Microsoft is great, if you like alcohol.
brotkasten said:I've heard Microsoft is great, if you like alcohol.
Sounds pretty good!lastflowers said:This is not false. My time there had plenty of moments with Alcohol involved. Obviously no one went crazy, but it was a very relaxed atmosphere where people in the same division could get to know everything that each other was working on (or just talk about sports).
It was a great experience. My boss told me "I don't care when you're here--just make sure you show up for meetings. Get your work done and help your fellow teammates, and you'll do fine here". Pretty much everyone I know there has bosses like that.
I would come in at 11 or 12 somedays, and 6 on other days (and leave at 2). I would put in 11 hours somedays, and 5 on others. Benefits were nice!
.GqueB. said:A friend (acquaintance) of mine started working at google a few months ago and she wont shut the fuck up about it. She begins all of her sentences about her job with "at my job at google".
Valve sounds like a touch more fun to work for though. The idea of being able to move my desk wherever I feel whenever I feel sounds amazing to me. But yea I can appreciate companies that try to keep their workers happy. I dont see why more placees dont do this. It doesnt have to be to this scale obviously but even small things help. My company is moving more and more in this direction Im noticing and it makes it very pleasant to work here.
Apparently we're getting a "creative lounge" complete with bean bags and such. A step in the right direction.
Insomniac for sure, check out all the cool shit on their site for employees. Have won lots of awards for employee satisfaction and shit too.Kyaw said:So Google and Valve...
Any other good companies to work at???
I'm 16, i have my whole life in front of me...
Amory Blaine said:whatever, great.
at my office we just received word that they would stop providing free nutrigrain bars and pretzels because people were abusing the system (in this case, abusing the system means eating the nutrigrain bars and pretzels). EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY.
onken said:I interviewed for Amazon one time. The office was a long distance from where I was living so after I passed the phone interview they crammed all the physical interviews into one day. 5 straight hours, was horrendous. I didn't get the job.
A few months back I was at a LUG meeting and met a guy interviewing for Google. He went for 6 interviews (different days) and got rejected, that shit must hurt.
But anyway, my current job is great. I'm only allowed to work a maximum of 1 hour overtime a day, and we have a fancy kitchen full of free shit. Very well looked after and it makes such a difference to your outlook. On the flip side I used to work for a very large Japanese company and my god, difference is day and night.
This is what Im curious about. All of these amenities sound fine but if I were working there, Id almost feel guilty working a 40 hour work week. On the one hand, you want to assume that they put these things here to support those that work those 70 hour work weeks. But on the other hand, its also easy to assume they put them there to encourage them.Tenks said:Isn't it common and almost required to put in 60-70 hr/week if you work for Google? Isn't 40 hr/week considered an "easy" week?
I heard Naught Dog is pretty great as well.Angry Fork said:Insomniac for sure, check out all the cool shit on their site for employees. Have won lots of awards for employee satisfaction and shit too.
This is true for most IT companies.Tenks said:Isn't it common and almost required to put in 60-70 hr/week if you work for Google? Isn't 40 hr/week considered an "easy" week?
Hi *****
We received your resume from ***** ***** for the Software Engineering Intern position and would like to thank you for your interest in career opportunities here at Google. Unfortunately, the position to which you have applied is no longer available. We will be keeping your resume active in our system and will continue to use our database to match your profile with new opportunities. We will reach out to you if we find an opening for which you may be qualified.
Thanks again for your interest in Google's careers and unique culture; we hope you will remain enthusiastic about our company.
Kind Regards,
**** *****
Google People Operations
Troidal said:If you get to work for Google, make sure it's full time employment. Anything out of that, they really treat contractors and temps like shit.
entrement said:I could only imagine how hard it will be leave a company like Google.
I can't see the legal culture meshing with any non conservative company culture. Anyway, discuss some legal department stories.commish said:I have friends who work at Google in their legal department. Uh... let's just say their experience has been a little different.
casablanca said:This is true for most IT companies.
I've tried once:
vas_a_morir said:As odd as it sounds, the fact that they acknowledge you when you send them a resume, especially in rejection, makes them better than pretty much every other company to which I have applied.
onken said:Haha, at aforementioned Japanese company they decided to put soup into the free vending machine and it just got rinsed. I remember seeing one guy struggling to carry 4 cups at once to his desk. They pulled that pretty quickly.
Bboy AJ said:I can't see the legal culture meshing with any non conservative company culture. Anyway, discuss some legal department stories.
People leave all the time. It is pretty common among the top Software Engineering companies( Microsoft, Facebook, Google, Amazon). They basically rotate.entrement said:I could only imagine how hard it will be leave a company like Google.
jvalioli said:People leave all the time. It is pretty common among the top Software Engineering companies( Microsoft, Facebook, Google, Amazon). They basically rotate.
Lasthope106 said:That sounds more like a brain teaser than the questions I was asked. The first question I had was you have a sequence of sorted integers where repetition is allowed. Find the index of the first number you are told.
There is an easy brute force solution, and a more "elegant" one, which I was required to code on the whiteboard.
entrement said:I could only imagine how hard it will be leave a company like Google.
BlueMagic said:What was the answer for that one?
Test for the number that separates the sequence in half, check if it's lower or higher and then repeat on the correct half?