I applied through college or university. I interviewed at Texas Instruments in Oct 2019
Interview
I got an on-campus interview first via the campus job expo. In about two weeks I got a chance to have a phone interview with senior digital design engineers in multiple locations in the US.
The on-campus interview was more about behavioral questions. It was easier since we were talking face-to-face. Whenever I felt struggling I could use my body language to say I was thinking and went through how I developed the answers step-by-step. Some of the questions were about life experience, which I've never thought of.
The more important part is that I had to give a brief introduction to my current and previous projects. List the detail in the resume so the interviewer has something to read. They also asked me what was the greatest challenge in my project.
The phone interview is more energy-consuming. I had to prepare slides to introduce myself, mostly about all the projects I've done. Spend time on this part and practice. I talked for about 25 minutes. (which is a little bit weird since I was talking to the air with no response, but I guess that's how a phone interview works) They then asked me several decision-making related questions, also lots of questions about the projects. I would suggest interviewees make the slides as clear as possible. Explain the why, how and what thoroughly.
For the technical part, it was not too hard. I was told to draw some basic logic cells with transistors/logic gates.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What was the greatest challenge in your project? Have you ever had tape-out experience? How much you know about TI? Describe a situation you took the action before reaching out to someone else. What kind of tool do you use to make sure your teammate's work is on schedule. What's the greatest challenge in your last program (coding).
Draw an asynchronous 4-bit counter. Draw a CMOS inverter, NAND2. Draw an SR-latch and explain it.
Basic digital design, clock domain crossing ,fifo for analog prepare rc circuit. keep your basic clear and dont try to make interviewer fool. Approach to problem is checked rather than answers.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
fifo depth, multiplier, 2s compliment rounding off
I applied through college or university. The process took 2 days. I interviewed at Texas Instruments (Thiruvananthapuram)
Interview
They started with asking questions about my projects in the resume. And they went deep into it.
Next they asked what is your favourite subject for which I answered digital electronics. They asked about fsm, flip flops, timing etc.
Had 2 rounds of technical interviews and 1 round of behavioral interview. As long as you know your basics of digital logic, such as counters, muxes, STA, etc it's not that hard.