I applied online. I interviewed at Intel Corporation
Interview
I got an email first asking about my availability for the interview. I got a phone call as per the schedule. It lasted for 45 minutes. This interview was for Graphics Validation Team in Folsom. I was expecting resume related questions as it was the first round but i was wrong.I sent an email to the interviewer few days after the interview. He replied saying i wasn't selected.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The questions are as follows :
Difference between validation and verification ?
What is Race condition?
Difference between Latch and flipflop?
How to design ROM?
What is a State machine?
Cycle driven and event driven simulation differences and which one is better
Functional and code coverage differences
Blocking and non-blocking assignments in Verilog
How to define variables in Verilog?
$display and $monitor differences
Setup and hold time
Hold time violation
Mesi protocol
Page table
DRAM and SRAM differences and how to design them
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 2 days. I interviewed at Intel Corporation (New Delhi)
Interview
I had been working as an intern at Intel for 9 months. Then I had undergone an interview for a graphics verification/validation team. There were two rounds(both technical), and they asked about my internship experiences, project works, and questions related to digital electronics, verilog code. My interviews were through and after 15 days I got my selection mail from HR.
Very technical and four to 5 rounds expected. One behavioral. Be prepared for digital design questions and computer architecture. Prepare for hardware languages too. Focus on problem solving and algorithm based approach.
I applied online. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Intel Corporation (San Jose, San Jose) in Dec 2021
Interview
2 entrevistas, una de conceptos y otra de técnica-práctica, empleador super ameno, te guían, preguntas de programación OOP, verificación, diseño lógico, verilog, electrónica digital, arquitectura de computadoras, Python, pseudocódigo, UVM/OVM