Anonymous wrote:Meant *NOT* surprising to see UMD on the list
Anonymous wrote:You could also argue the greater benefit of location which is why Santa Clara and SJSU are on the list, as well as Berkeley, Irvine, UCLA, USC, Stanford and UCSD.
Google has a large Pittsburgh office as well after hiring a bunch of CMU profs to start their self-driving efforts (and growing it substantially from there).
Anonymous wrote:
Northeastern is not a feeder to Silicon Valley.
Anonymous wrote:A great school name will only get you so far. You have to be smart, you have to really love to code and work on it a lot. In my family, we have one with a history degree from a school no one knows. He's very intelligent, loved to code, taught himself and worked his way into a top developer position at Microsoft. Another went to a good school, but not the top for CS. But she also is highly intelligent and worked really hard. Now going through the security clearance for the FBI where the salary will be huge. Lots of students go into CS thinking they will make all this money. The ones who do are smart and know they need to put in the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:boston has an extremely broad based and robust tech community - Harvard MIT,
obviously - and Northeastern is closely tied with tech community with coop programs - Northeastern a hidden gem amongst tech schools..
Northeastern is not a feeder to Silicon Valley.
You do realize you are commenting on a thread with a list of the top tech feeder schools to Silicon Valley, and Northeastern is on the list?
Many of the listed companies aren't exactly top tech companies or doing anything interesting. Ascribing value to which schools they recruit from isn't all thqt meaningful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:boston has an extremely broad based and robust tech community - Harvard MIT,
obviously - and Northeastern is closely tied with tech community with coop programs - Northeastern a hidden gem amongst tech schools..
Northeastern is not a feeder to Silicon Valley.
You do realize you are commenting on a thread with a list of the top tech feeder schools to Silicon Valley, and Northeastern is on the list?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduates of other Universities can still apply and yes, UMD Computer Science graduates make it to the FAANG companies. The key is to be so skilled they have to hire you when you interview. Keep up with the technologies and think/work like a software architect even as a new graduate.
Most people reading and replying to this thread really have no idea what getting hired as a dev for top tier software companies is like. In my limited experience, it’s not at all a matter of “keep up with new technologies” but rather “have a brain that enables you to solve LeetCode ‘hard’ problems in 30 minutes rather than the several hours that very, very smart and skilled devs take. “
I’ve been a developer/development manager for a long time, and I recently went through the interview process for one of companies on this list on a lark. I was shocked at how difficult the technical interview was, and equally shocked to be offered a fairly low level IC developer job paying just under what my current senior architect role pays. Also, the job I was offered was coding in a language I don’t know, but the company said “we know smart people can learn new technologies, we’re not worried about that.”
How about 6 interviews, each one testing and probing you. Factual problems, technical gotchas...
I agree, most here don't understand how difficult the hiring process is in SV.
I thought Google stopped doing the brain teaser questions.
When I interviewed there eons ago, those were the only types of questions they asked - yes, 6 people all asking brain teaser questions.
Anonymous wrote:The absence of THE world famous Ohio State University immediately invalidates this list...