As
promised, here follows what I hope will be an interesting overview of
my interview experience as an intern candidate at Google, Microsoft and
Apple.
Google
My interview at Google was probably the most unusual of the bunch. A
long time ago (Almost a year), one of my friends in the fellow
reverse-engineering community contacted me about a job opporunity at a
Google office in Montreal, working on a top-secret project, but which
was related to my knowledge. I got to the phone screens, and had a
great first interview. My second interview however didn’t go so well.
It was the first time my interviewer was ever screening a candidate,
and he kept me stuck on a single question. The question was related to
a low-level structure change in a private datatype used in Vista’s
kernel; this change was documented in a patent, which I always found
fishy as an interview question. Nevertheless, I believe I answered
correctly some of the more generic implementation details, but the
interviewer kept coming back on the same question and seemed like he
wanted to hear a precise answer. Additionally, it didn’t seem like the
project was fully related to my field of experise; unsurprinsingly, I
got a refusal letter two weeks later.
Fast forward eight months later, and the DRM hacking news appears on
the Internet. I get a call from Google the day after about setting up
some interviews. My interviews get cancelled a couple of days later,
then rescheduled for Monday, after my return from the SCALE 5X talk. I
have a short (and very interesting) conversation with someone at Google
would probably end up being my boss/mentor, and I get news a couple of
days later that I got the job. And that’s about it.
Job Description: Security/Software Engineer/Developer. Code Auditing plus Windows Internals consulting/special projects.
Phone Screens: 1
Campus Visit: No
Apple
My path to Apple was a long and ultimately rewarding one. I attended
CUTC last January, already with knowledge that I would be interviewing
with Microsoft later. Therefore, I avoided most of the smaller booths,
avoided Microsoft since I already had an interview, as well as Google
since, at the time, I had not received the phone call about a new
opportunity. The only company that I still had some interest in during
the job fair was Apple. This is mostly because during the day, I
attended two sessions on Apple Development Tools. The first one was on
Shark, which completely amazed me. There were lots of technical
questions during the presentation, and I was always the only one
answering them correctly, so the Apple people noticed me and asked me
to come for a chat. I went to see them, and handed in my CV. The Apple
recruiter was mostly looking for people to work on the Ipod or Mac
stuff, so my Windows Kernel experience didn’t seem relevant at first.
My friends got calls from Apple during the days after, I didn’t. I
gave up on the opporunity since I thought they wouldn’t be interested.
Two weeks later, I get a call from the recruiter saying she passed on
my information to the OS X Kernel Team. After the DRM news, the
Security Team gets interested as well. What followed after was the most
exhausting interviewing process I’ve been through. Because Apple
couldn’t fly me in (I don’t think they do that for non-local
candidates), I had to go through the equivalent of the Microsoft
interview process, but over the phone. Since I was actually
interviewing with two teams, double the amount of time and people for
an accurate depiction. In total, I believe I spoke with 9 or 10 Apple
developers, managers and testers on both teams.
The questions were very technical, but not in the “optimize this
algorithm” way. The engineers there seemed to be genuinely interested
in my ideas, thought process, and solutions/problems I could find to
various designs. One question I was asked, which I think I can share,
is how a Hypervisor Rootkit would be more dangerous then a normal
Kernel Rootkit, how to protect against that, as well as how to create a
workable Hypervisor Patchguard-like system, what to look for, how to
discriminate against the OS touching critical data, and malware, etc.
There also of course the general ReactOS/TinyKRNL questions as well as
questions on my interest for the job/company.
I felt exhausted at the end of about the 1-2 weeks this process
took, but I thought I had done very well on all the interviews. During
my talk in Waterloo, I got a call saying I got offers from both teams,
and had to choose one. I chose the Core OS kernel team, and received my
offer in the mail a couple of days later.
Job Description: Kernel Developer. Working on various Darwin/OS X related undisclosed projects.
Phone Screens: 6, some were conference calls with multiple people on the line.
Campus Visit: No
Microsoft
My path at Microsoft started through various friends and contacts
that I’ve made a the company in the last few months thanks to my
security-related research and presentations/papers. They saw in me a
really good candidate for the various security groups at Mircrosoft,
and also on the actual NT Kernel Team. The interview process at
Microsoft was both disappointing and amazing. First off, it started
with a pretty technical phone screen. Unforunately, my screen was on
SQL, which I knew absolutely nothing about. However, my interviewer was
very understanding, gave me a couple of hints, and I was able to
identify and solve issues with “cursors”, something I had never even
heard of. I was also asked some more generic and personality questions,
and I my opinion of the interview was that I did decently. I was also
interviewed by one of the most prominent figures in SQL, working on the
Core SQL Engine Group at Microsoft, and someone I deeply respect.
This interview let me to an actual invitation for a campus
interview. This is where the disappointing part starts. My phone screen
was sometime in October or November. It took about two months, by
email, to get an actual interview date, and it ended up being in March.
Therefore, even though Microsoft was my first confirmed interview, in
the time frame that it took the mto set something up for me, Apple and
Google had the chance to hear about me, contact me, interview me and
both send me offers. This created a very difficult problem for me in
terms of various deadlines that the other offers had to meet. All in
all, I didn’t feel that my RC (Recruiter Coordinator) was very
communicative with me, and I had to rely on my connections inside the
company to figure out what was going on. Contrast this with Apple which
had everyone on their team calling me (which greatly raised my interest
in the company) and even Google, who had one of their top engineers
chat with me on the phone, and both companies kept in touch by email
and phone relating my status, offers, interviews, etc. Microsoft’s
replies, when available, were always robotic and template files.
However, this disappointement quickly faded away once I got on
campus. Microsoft has the most amazing interviewing experience. First
of all, not only do they pay all your expenses, you also get a generous
amount of money to spend during your daily activites, and you’re
encourage to stay more then one day. Taxis are included, up to 75$ of
food per day is included, museum visits, sightseeing, long-distance
calls, Internet access and more are all free perks you get.
Additionally, before your rounds start, Building 19 has various
computers, big-screen TVs and XBOXes to fill up your time. You can also
visit the campus, and even go see the Microsoft Museum, which has some
unique artifacts you’re likely not to see anywhere else.
Once your interviews start, you’ll meet with a variety of people on
the teams that are interviewing you. There are all very smart people
and each of them has his or her own interviewing style. You’ll probably
start out with coding questions/tricks, and move up to more high-level
implementation/architecture stuff. My final interview was with a hiring
manager, which consisted a lot more of personality and profesional
questions related to work habits, ethics, etc. I like the fact that the
interviews seemed to test every part of the candidate, from your
typical algorithm questions down to your pattern of thinking and
answering hard business problems.
I had a serious issue with my work at Microsoft however. First of
all, the deadlines for my other offers were Monday (and my interviews
on a Friday). Secondly, I needed to know if I could ever work on
ReactOS/TinyKRNL after my internship was over. The only peopel who
could answer this were LCA, the Law and Corporate Affairs deparment of
Microsoft, who are usually pretty hard to get by, especially on a
weekend. I made it clear that two things were critical to me: being
allowed to work on ReactOS after my internship was over, and working on
the Base or Virdian Team.
It turns out I passed my interviews, and my understanding was that
an offer could’ve been offered to me. Unfortunately, I was qualified as
a “legal risk”, and they did not want to go forward with it, due to my
work on ReactOS. It was made clear to me that I would have to choose
between the two. Since this wasn’t a full time employement, and only my
first internship in many to come, I didn’t want to sacrifice the
project for an internship. Who knows if I didn’t like the Base Team? Or
maybe I wanted to work in some other company later on, or maybe
Microsoft would not want me anymore. The restriction of never having to
work on ReactOS again seemed way too harsh — not even non-compete
agreements are this permanent, but regardless, I can understand why
Microsoft chose to do this. I am still very greatful for meeting all
those smart people, and will be keeping in touch with them in the
future.
Job Description: Kernel Developer. Working on the base kernel and/or Virdian.
Phone Screens: 1
Campus Visit: Yes. Five Interviews.
Final Choice
Ultimately, because of the Microsoft situation, my choice became
Apple vs Google. Both companies are dream companies to work for, and it
wasn’t easy choosing between the two. Ultimately however, the work I
would be doing at Apple was a lot more related to my core competencies
(kernel development), and gave me the chance to discover a new
architecture and OS design. I felt like some of my work at Google might
be hindered by their requirement for computational/algorithm experience
and my lack of a formal training in the matter (which won’t come until
my next semesters). Also, Apple’s details about my work (which I can’t
mention) clearly became the defining factor in my decision. The team
size, which is extremly small, meant that my work would have a real
impact on the products/services/etc I’d be working on, and that was
also another great opporunity that I think an internship is good for.
Another important factor was ReactOS, which didn’t seem to hinder at
all my work at Apple, as well as the friendlyness of all the people at
Apple. I am trying to bring my girlfriend over with me for the summer,
and Apple was very forthcoming in helping with this. In the end, the
Apple offer was the most interesting, and the culture/ethics and work
seemed the most adapted to me, as did the helpfulness of everyone
involved in my interview process and offer. I felt like I was really
needed, a truly unique candidate, and that was indeed a great feeling
to have.
Conclusion
Please remember that this experience was unique to me; do not
attempt to generalize or make any employement choices based on this
experience, since you will most likely have a different one. I have
however tried my best to avoid giving away any confidential or private
information, so please do not ask/make comments on my offer, and perks
offered, et caetera, because I will not discuss them.
I strongly recommend anyone with the opportunity to work at any of
these three companies to take it, if their interest in the work they’ll
be doing is high. They are all amazing companies that I’d love to work
for during my life.
If there’s one lesson that I want to share from my experience it’s
this: go with your interests. Don’t be amazed by perks, salaries, or
other material things. Does the campus/team seem a good match? Does the
work interest you? If yes, everything else should be secondary.
Original story