I've been interviewing lately with a team that does GPU diagnostics at NVIDIA lately, and I'm flying out to California again for a day of technical interviews sometime next month. The team is 7 or 8 people based out of Santa Clara who maintain a system for writing tests that can run on a C++ implementation of graphics hardware, a Verilog implementation, and the physical hardware created from the netlist. (Don't worry, I didn't know what Verilog or netlists were either.) The idea is, if each step of the process worked correctly, the output of the tests should be the same.
It all sounds quite technical and interesting, but I'm definitely going to have to study up before I fly out there. NVIDIA is the company that hands out programming tests for you to do on the spot at the career fair, so I'm sure a full day of technical interviews from them will be quite challenging.
It all sounds quite technical and interesting, but I'm definitely going to have to study up before I fly out there. NVIDIA is the company that hands out programming tests for you to do on the spot at the career fair, so I'm sure a full day of technical interviews from them will be quite challenging.