Passa al contenutoPassa al piè di pagina
  • Lavori
  • Aziende
  • Stipendi
  • Per le aziende

      Migliora la tua carriera

      Scopri le tue potenzialità di guadagno, trova lavori da sogno e condividi approfondimenti su lavoro e vita privata in forma anonima.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      Jet

      Questa è la tua azienda?

      Circa
      Recensioni
      Stipendi e benefit
      Lavori
      Colloqui
      Colloqui
      Ricerche correlate: Recensioni su Jet | Offerte di lavoro di Jet | Stipendi di Jet | Benefit di Jet
      Colloqui di JetColloqui per Mobile Software Engineer presso JetColloquio di Jet


      Glassdoor

      • Chi siamo
      • Contattaci

      Aziende

      • Account Business gratuito
      • Spazio per le aziende
      • Blog per le aziende

      Informazioni

      • Aiuto
      • Linee guida
      • Condizioni d'uso
      • Privacy e scelte pubblicitarie
      • Non vendere né condividere le mie informazioni
      • Strumento per l'accettazione dei cookie

      Lavora con noi

      • Inserzionisti
      • Carriere
      Scarica l'app

      • Cerca:
      • Aziende
      • Lavori
      • Località

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. "Glassdoor," "Worklife Pro," "Bowls" e il relativo logo sono marchi registrati di Glassdoor LLC.

      Aziende seguite

      Non lasciarti sfuggire opportunità e informazioni privilegiate seguendo le aziende dove vorresti lavorare.

      Ricerche di lavoro

      Ricevi suggerimenti e aggiornamenti personalizzati avviando le tue ricerche.

      Colloquio per Mobile Software Engineer

      2 apr 2016
      Candidato anonimo a colloquio
      Hoboken, NJ
      Nessuna offerta
      Esperienza positiva
      Colloquio facile

      Candidatura

      Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite un'agenzia di reclutamento personale. La procedura ha richiesto 3 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Jet (Hoboken, NJ) nel mese di mar 2016

      Colloquio

      I recently finished up a number of interview rounds for a Mobile Developer position at Jet and thought it might be useful to recap my experience for other candidates coming along down the pipeline. Jet's offices are physically located in downtown Hoboken, on the banks of the Hudson River. The interior space on the 8th floor has a very modern & inspiring feel, with floor to ceiling windows (and a beautiful view of Manhattan on the other side of the river). All of the somewhat impersonal looking desks are currently laid out in pods (i.e. two monitors per desk, 3 - 4 desks per pod?). Lockers for personal effects line the walls. There are a few private spaces (conference rooms for meetings & interviews), phone rooms, for the most part it's all open plan & open space (plus a kitchen -- grab some drinks and snacks between your interviews -- and a nice reception/all-hands-meeting area with a pool table). Despite this, Jet is actually running out of space for their ~300 employees on that floor. Each time I went to the men's room between interview sessions, I noticed a mini-line of one or two guys waiting for a stall to open up. The current plan is to take over some of the 7th floor in the building before the end of the year and possibly the entire 7th floor next year. It'll probably be in the nick of time too: the week I was interviewing, my coordinator said they had 25 candidates coming through. Jet's goal is to get to 100 engineers before the year end. If you're flying in for your interview from out of town, Jet will likely put you up in the W Hoboken hotel next door to their office building. In my case, I was staying in Manhattan, and I have to admit I was very impressed with the reverse commute. It took about 20 minutes to bus it from the Port Authority terminal to the Jet office, and the return trip on the NJ PATH train was equally as fast. There's also a ferry stop very close by. For my on-site interview, the coordinator sent me a list of names of people I'd be talking to ahead of time (useful for me to look up their history and background via LinkedIn), ranging from various developers up to a relatively high up person in the company. There appear to be a lot of higher-up bosses at the company, judging from Jet's recruitment videos posted on YouTube. The phone interview questions were more challenging than the on-site interview questions (I got hit with only a couple milder technical questions and a somewhat tougher one; recapped below), so I'm guessing the on-site interview was meant more as a culture-fit test. Everyone seemed very friendly and welcoming, except for the most senior person on my interview schedule. He ended up keeping me waiting an extra hour in the interview room as he had to deal with technical issues with the public-facing website (apparently it goes completely dead at least once a month). So when he arrived, he seemed somewhat distracted and not particularly enthusiastic or interested in me or the deep experience I was bringing to the table. I didn’t get any post interview feedback or notification on how things went until after I prodded the recruiter three or four weeks beyond the interview, and she immediately responded with the “good luck landing a job somewhere else” generic interview rejection e-mail. Not a very professional or organized ending to an otherwise decent interviewing experience. On the flip side, judging by how heavily Jet is trying to binge on new employees, if I were actually working for them, I’d be very worried about the eventual purge if investors lost patience with the company for taking their time to beat Amazon at their game. Hopefully my experience flunking the Jet.com interview process will help you to prepare to pass your interviewing day. If you find any of the information in this review helpful, please let me know by voting "Yes" on the "Helpful?" question below (this helps to motivate me to be as detailed as possible).

      Domande di colloquio [2]

      Domanda 1

      Imagine (or even better, draw out) a railroad track divided into three sections due to two signals placed onto the track. Then two robots running identical code are dropped onto the tracks. One into the middle (in between the two signals) and another to the right of the rightmost signal. Both robots run the same program, written in a simple BASIC-like language. here’s the sample app the interviewer provided 10 LEFT 20 RIGHT 30 IF SIGNAL THEN 40 LEFT 50 ELSE 60 RIGHT 70 GOTO 10 If this program were run on both robots, the robot to the right of the rightmost signal would go off screen to the right to infinity. Assuming that a collision check happens on each line of code, how could we design a program that can get the robots to collide (or end up on the same place on the tracks at the same time)?
      1 risposta

      Domanda 2

      given a list of stock prices (which are integers) sorted by time order, come up with an algorithm to decide the best time to buy & sell.
      1 risposta
      21