I applied through college or university. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Texas Instruments
Interview
The overall process took 3 weeks, first round was on campus, right after the Fall Career Fair. It was basic resume screening and slight technical questions. 2nd round was via HireVue and consisted of a 1 hour interview. This interview was technical and behavioral. The third round was on site in Dallas TX where the candidates presented a small powerpoint in 2 back to back interviews. These interviews were also both technical and behavioral.
I applied online. The process took 4 months. I interviewed at Texas Instruments (Dallas, TX) in Dec 2022
Interview
It was quite simple, had two levels of interviews. First one was behavioral and technical. Second one was to prepare a presentation of a previous project and talk about it. All in all it's not too stressful.
I applied through college or university. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Texas Instruments
Interview
Met a recruiter at an online job fair, scheduled first round screening, and the second round was with a systems engineer. Followed by online assessments, then 3-person panel interview. The whole process took about 2 months
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
a lot of op-amp based questions. Ideal behavior, non-idealities, diodes, and RC or LC transient/FR
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 1 week. I interviewed at Texas Instruments (Dallas, TX) in May 2022
Interview
The interview was split into 3 stages:
An initial screening that has you take a behavioral test, and then another test that tests your cognitive reasoning and deduction skills.
My first round interview was quite nice. It was very technical and I had questions asked about my resume in the embedded world - FPGA, MCU, etc. I was also asked a few behavioral questions.
My last round interview was also a technical interview revolving around analog circuits and testing with some behavioral questions.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Almost all of the first interview was about FPGAs and microcontrollers and then a little bit of hardware.
Final round had some digital, but was almost entirely analog.