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Programmers: Your favorite interview questions


Question

I haven't seen one these posts yet on this forum(if there is forgive me : )), but I figured to help out more people looking for programming work I would start a post for employers who are looking to hire new programmers what kind of questions you guys ask. I'm the technical director at a small game studio in LA, and were expanding so I also looking to see what everyone does so I can adjust accordingly.

Some of the basic questions I ask are:

What is global scope/local scope.

What is a template class

What is inheritance/polymorphism/etc.

Than some really basic logic stuff like whats a recursive function, etc etc.

Than I begin to ask a couple questions that are kind of off the wall because one thing I noticed is College graduates from big schools such as UCLA 9/10 can't figure stuff for themselves. Students are so used to stuff getting spoon fed to them, some of which is just nasty. One thing that really irritated me at one of the studios I worked at previously a couple of there senior programmers came to me and said "I don't know how to do xyz, can you help?" This normally is a pretty common thing, except when xyz happens over and over again and its something that easily be found by doing a quick google search.

I ask the interviewee if they can do something that 99% of the programmers out there can't do. They would obviously say I don't know, I would then ask them than to look it up for me on google and write out basic steps on how to get it done. Lets say I ask them how to register a custom Debug Engine in Visual Studio, first google search for "visual studio custom debug engine" which turns up http://msdn.microsof...4(v=vs.80).aspx , with a link to http://msdn.microsof...(v=vs.110).aspx. Even though the information on the latter article is actually wrong if they copied that I would be so happy. I've had guys sit there for 10 minutes struggling, and I feel that's kind of ridiculous. Every programmer in world should know how to use google :/.

Than depending on the level of the job, I would go into some more nitpicker things say in Unreal, Unity, D3D, whatever and if someone didn't know the answer I would ask them to google it and give me an explanation. I had actually had one guy who didn't graduate from a college, straight out of high school and he didn't know something I asked him, and than he immediately asked if he could go on google and look it up. I actually hired him on the spot and he ones of the best programmers I've ever had.

Anyway what kind of stuff do you guys ask?

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I no longer ask technical questions because we aren't allowed to do face to face interviews and over the phone, any one can do fairly well so I base my judgement on the applicants technical inquiries.

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It's probably worth mentioning why that won't always work... what happens if a = MAX_INT - 2 and b = MAX_INT - 3? The addition of a and b will overflow...

Can you think of another operator you can use?

There's a cute trick with the xor operator but I don't see any value in testing if the candidate knows about it. If he can find it on the spot then that's certainly impressive, but is it really the kind of skills you're looking for? On modern CPUs this is even counter-productive compared to using a temporary variable, so it's a typical example of premature and misguided "optimization". I view this type of question as outdated and as an interviewee it'd raise doubts in my mind about the company.
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I no longer ask technical questions because we aren't allowed to do face to face interviews and over the phone, any one can do fairly well so I base my judgement on the applicants technical inquiries.

Wow, really? I would struggle to employ anyone I haven't met face to face. Just out of interest, how many of the candidates you employ turn out to be a waste of space?

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As already mentioned by a few of the people above, FizzBuzz (well, a slight variation on the FizzBuzz question) is probably my favourite. While it doesn't find "good" programmers it does well to quickly weed out the 80-90%+ of applicants applying for programming jobs who can't code at all. At work we always ask it before the proper interview, if the applicant can't do it with and without modulo in a reasonable time we don't even bother with the full interview.

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if you can't do a modulus program..... and 99.5% don't get it? seriously?!

There's a cute trick with the xor operator

I haven't really used modulus for anything besides rand(), and to be honest I would be tripped up on a modulus question. XOR operators I have used, and do use on a regular basis, but the mechanics behind xor I would only consider asking if I'm hiring for a high level position that has a lot of technical work behind it that would benefit from knowing how xor stuff works(e.g like a video codec). I try to steer clear of nitty gritty stuff like this because people are coming in knowing there competing against a lot of people so they come in scared.

I have been doing programming now for 17 years and professionally for 10, it really wasn't until I went to college and talked to people in the game industry that I was able to land my first gig. I'm entirely self taught(I really just went to college to do the meet and greet stuff), and I remember when I was first out of high school I got a dry interview at Square Enix. The guy asked me what was global scope and local scope; I knew what scope was but never heard that term before. Needless to say I botched up the interview, but now that I actually have to do interviews I try to take that experience into account.

Their are a lot of veterans in the game industry(my field anyway) who are entirely self taught like myself that haven't heard various terms like scope(until someone brings it up) but they know what it is. This is why I try not to be a term nazi and if someone doesn't know something, I give them the chance to look it up. If they see the term and go drr and from there look away from the screen, and tell me exactly what it is I'm just fine with that. But you would be surpised on how many college graduates can't look stuff up, and I know for a fact they probably haven't done some parts of what I need them to do(just becuase a lot of game programming stuff isn't taught in any school), and if they can't figure it out I can't hold someones hand through the work.

While it doesn't find "good" programmers it does well to quickly weed out the 80-90%+ of applicants applying for programming jobs who can't code at all.

Again it finds programmers that paid attention in school, doesn't mean they have good logic, just good retention :p.

"C++/CLI should be thought of as a language of its own (with a new set of keywords, for example), instead of the C++ superset-oriented Managed C++ (MC++) (whose non-standard keywords were styled like __gc or __value)." http://en.wikipedia....iki/C%2B%2B/CLI

C++/CLI has its own ECMA standard distinct from the ISO C++ standard, it is not designed by the same comittee, it has a different syntax, a different compiler, it compiles for a different platform.

CLI I don't think is used enough and have enough practical usage to be taught as its own course. Personally, I wish CLI would just go away, it really clusters up a codebase :/.

if the applicant can't do it with and without modulo in a reasonable time we don't even bother with the full interview.

To each his own, but I personally like the steer away from stuff like that because as I said just above that shows more retention rather than logic, and since a lot of things I need my employess to get done aren't taught in school I really try and group logic testing and ability to research something in one section of the interview. This why I ask someone how to do something I know isn't taught in school, and they can outline and do research on what needs to get done as quickly as possible odds are there pretty logical.

Before that if they know polymorphism, pointers, etc I know they can at least program, so I try not to focus to much on if they can program or not. I want to find someone that can think out side the box. One other question I ask is, since I always look for someone that knows C# and C++, I ask them how would automate hooking up managed and unmanaged code without using CLI or Com.

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if else man .. ftw ... then again the most i did was arrays

That's the whole pitfall of FizzBuzz (unless you do duplicate checks, which is usually not wanted)

Given two integer variables, A and B, how could you swap their values without using a third variable? (This is my favourite. It wasn't actually given to me, but to my housemate at the time. He didn't get it, but the interviewer gave it to him to do on the train home, he figured it out on the train and emailed the answer to the interviewer, subsequently got the job :p)

Could you give the solution? Or is the solution language specific, like Python assigment:

A, B = B, A 

But still, internally I'm sure a temporary variable(s!) is being used.

EDIT: Forgot to add my solution.


void FizzBuzz()
{
for (int num = 1; num < 101; num ++)
{
bool multiple = false;
if (num % 3 == 0)
{
cout << "Fizz";
multiple = true;
}
if (num % 5 == 0)
{
cout << "Buzz";
multiple = true;
}
if (!multiple)
cout << num;
cout << endl;
}
}
[/CODE]

I'm still not sure if it's better to declare a variable outside of the loop, but I'm fairly sure it will be optimized by the compiler.

And my solution is fairly readable (I hope).

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Again it finds programmers that paid attention in school, doesn't mean they have good logic, just good retention :p.

I think asking a candidate to solve FizzBang with and without modulus is silly and defeats the point of the exercise. They just need to make sure they produce some code that solves the problem as expressed in plain English through whatever means necessary in a reasonable amount of time without making any of the common mistakes.

That way it does weed out 90% of those people that claim they can code when they can't.

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There's a cute trick with the xor operator but I don't see any value in testing if the candidate knows about it. If he can find it on the spot then that's certainly impressive, but is it really the kind of skills you're looking for? On modern CPUs this is even counter-productive compared to using a temporary variable, so it's a typical example of premature and misguided "optimization". I view this type of question as outdated and as an interviewee it'd raise doubts in my mind about the company.

Then I'd be inlined to say you missed the point of the question, which (of course only in my opinion) was to test an applicant's ability to think outside the box to create an alternative solution to a common textbook problem given a specific constraint. In the context of the job being applied for, it may also have been relevant (although I don't know for sure) since the job being applied for was to write software for very specialized hardware, which was very environmentally constrained (something to do with turbochargers IIRC).

Of course, in reality for most systems, saving 1-8 bytes of memory is pointless and complicates a simple problem, so temporary variables would be used. But there are certainly specific cases where optimisation like that is useful, especially in extremely memory constrained systems (embedded systems, for example) where the cost of an extra couple of cycles is worth the bytes saved.

Could you give the solution? Or is the solution language specific, like Python assigment:
A, B = B, A 

But still, internally I'm sure a temporary variable(s!) is being used.

Firey posted the solution that my housemate came up with. As rfirth said, if the sum of the values would be greater than INT_MAX, then the solution fails, but no specific values were provided, so I think the answer is reasonable. In fact, I'd say that a good follow up quesiton would have been "How would your solution for the question above react to the following test cases. Which cases, if any, would fail?".

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I've been asked that question. As soon as you give the solution using modulus, they ask you to do it again without using modulus/multiplication/division.

Only solution I can think of without using modulus/multiplication/division would be to loop subtracting the number each time until the number is less than that number and checking it for 0.

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Firey posted the solution that my housemate came up with. As rfirth said, if the sum of the values would be greater than INT_MAX, then the solution fails, but no specific values were provided, so I think the answer is reasonable. In fact, I'd say that a good follow up quesiton would have been "How would your solution for the question above react to the following test cases. Which cases, if any, would fail?".

Ah many thanks, completely missed it! I also remember now that it wasn't that 3 variables are mandatory for a swap, but at least 3 instructions are.

Also, I completely agree on the fact that when hiring programmers for highly constrained systems like a small embedded ARM board, things like a washing machine or even better example, car computer.

Working in such environments would require very safe code and there's very little overhead available. So doing such interview tests will filter out people who most likely won't be able to work on such projects.

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Then I'd be inlined to say you missed the point of the question, which (of course only in my opinion) was to test an applicant's ability to think outside the box to create an alternative solution to a common textbook problem given a specific constraint. In the context of the job being applied for, it may also have been relevant (although I don't know for sure) since the job being applied for was to write software for very specialized hardware, which was very environmentally constrained (something to do with turbochargers IIRC).

Of course, in reality for most systems, saving 1-8 bytes of memory is pointless and complicates a simple problem, so temporary variables would be used. But there are certainly specific cases where optimisation like that is useful, especially in extremely memory constrained systems (embedded systems, for example) where the cost of an extra couple of cycles is worth the bytes saved.

If the job involves designing algorithms for unorthodox CPUs, extremely memory constrained systems, or requires solid mastery of bitwise operations, then the question is useful, but either I missed something or no mention was made of the specific job for which this question was asked.

I would be very impressed if someone who has never heard of the trick before were able to find it on the spot in an interview. It's not a trivial algorithm. As far as testing "out-of-the-box" thinking goes, there are much better questions to ask. In general, the xor swap algorithm:

- Is slower than using a temporary variable

- Obfuscates the code

- Doesn't even result in any memory savings as optimizers can optimize a temporary variable away, perform exchange with a single XCHG x86 instruction, etc. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XOR_swap_algorithm#Reasons_for_avoidance_in_practice

There's something just wrong about expecting any programmer to know about an obscure algorithm that's generally best avoided in practice.

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If the job involves designing algorithms for unorthodox CPUs, extremely memory constrained systems, or requires solid mastery of bitwise operations, then the question is useful, but either I missed something or no mention was made of the specific job for which this question was asked.

I would be very impressed if someone who has never heard of the trick before were able to find it on the spot in an interview. It's not a trivial algorithm. As far as testing "out-of-the-box" thinking goes, there are much better questions to ask. In general, the xor swap algorithm:

- Is slower than using a temporary variable

- Obfuscates the code

- Doesn't even result in any memory savings as optimizers can optimize a temporary variable away, perform exchange with a single XCHG x86 instruction, etc. See http://en.wikipedia....nce_in_practice

There's something just wrong about expecting any programmer to know about an obscure algorithm that's generally best avoided in practice.

Like I said, I expect that the question was posed to see what answers the candidates could come up with, a "thinking outside the box" problem solving aptitude question, rather than a know the spec/processor/application question. A very very elementary question with a twist intended to remove the candidate from their comfort zone to see if they can think creatively. That's why I liked it anyway.

Then again, the job was writing systems (again IIRC) using RPG, and very old, highly constrained systems; so within the context of the job it may well have been relevant. Not every programming job has the luxury of optimizing compilers and x86 instruction sets.

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The one I use most often in interviews is "How would you crash the runtime/virtual machine for your favorite language (or the one we're using here)"

Whether you're using Java, C++, Objective C, MSIL, Python, damn near anything that isn't ANSI C is operating in some sort of a runtime environment - knowing where the weaknesses are and how you might exploit them to cause the runtime to crash (rather than your application) is a good test of their knowledge of the tools.

I don't necessarily expect an "this is the step-by-step guide", just a pretty good explanation of where they would go looking. "I know that the VM can leak memory if certain kinds of interproces communication goes wrong - I also know that I can force that communication to go wrong by doing x so I would check the buglist for issues in y and then?" It's the thought process that matters.

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I was curious about the FizzBuzz question, so I tried to do something a little more original.


void fizzBuzz()
{
foreach(i; 1 .. 100 + 1) switch((i % 3 == 0) + (i % 5 == 0) * 2)
{
default: writeln(i); break;
case 1: writeln("Fizz"); break;
case 3: write("Fizz");
case 2: writeln("Buzz");
}
}
[/CODE]

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Dang FizzBuzz. I had to do one once in Java and completed it in like 15 seconds using ternary operators. The most difficult part isnt the code, but rather the mindset of "how in the hell is this going to be applied".

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Wow, really? I would struggle to employ anyone I haven't met face to face. Just out of interest, how many of the candidates you employ turn out to be a waste of space?

Oddly enough, letting the applicant do the talking has worked out pretty well. I wish I had body language to read but just listening to them ask questions certainly hasn't resulted in any worse candidates and maybe even a better hiring average. I once had a calc instructor that graded strictly based on the questions a student asked and not on test scores. He believed that the deeper your understanding of something is, the level of the questions you ask will reflect that. Since I was over 30 at the time and already working in the industry I thought that was an interesting way to analyze a persons understanding of something. I've applied that here because I have no choice.

You'd be surprised. If you really understand what a developer candidate NEEDS to do in a position its easy to spot each persons skill levels and who can technically do the job. The problem is technically capable is not really what we look for. Even in previous companies with in person interviews, the most I'll ever really do is maybe a fizzbuzz. The average business application coder isn't doing rocket science. Every team I've been on in the last 16 years has basically done nothing more than schlep data from some DB to a UI and back. Scanning back on this thread, I looked at one of Dr_Asiks questions

"You have a cloud of points in 2d. Design an algorithm to draw the smallest circle that contains all the points."

Nope, haven't needed to analyze 2D points in 16 years, probably don't need a dev that can now. One of the 'trigger' things I may listen for as an example is what tool sets or frameworks they have used in the last year or so and how do they talk about them. Do they just hit the buzz words or do they really talk about them at a deeper level.

In practical terms, what we found to be important for us is:

  • Do they have an understanding of the fundamentals of whatever language/s we are using?
  • Can they/are they willing to learn?
  • Can they interact with end users?
  • Can they interact with business owners?
  • Are they a prima donna?

If the first four are yes and the last no, then we probably have a winner - assuming they can pass the background and drug test...

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Scanning back on this thread, I looked at one of Dr_Asiks questions

"You have a cloud of points in 2d. Design an algorithm to draw the smallest circle that contains all the points."

Nope, haven't needed to analyze 2D points in 16 years, probably don't need a dev that can now.

The question was for a game programming position, where the ability to design algorithms that work with points and vectors in 2D and 3D space is very important. Actually I was tasked to design such an algorithm during my internship there.

Also the answer to that is not particularly difficult:

A circle is defined by a center point and a radius. To find the center point, find Xmax, Xmin, Ymax, Ymin in your cloud of points, and your center is the point in the middle of that (Xmin + ((Xmax - Xmin) / 2), Ymin + ((Ymax - Ymin) / 2)).

Now the radius is the smallest one that ensures the circle contains all the points: it therefore has to be as long as the distance to the furthest away point. The distance from the center to a point is simply the norm of the Point-Center vector. Go over your cloud of points, calculate the distance from the center for each, select the largest. Done.

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Here are a couple of somewhat evil questions. I'd never ask them, but these are my favourites from discussions with my colleagues:

1. Given an RBGA pixel, with 8 bits per channel packing into a 32-bit integer, write a function which does saturated addition on two pixels.

2. In Java, write a function which takes a string and returns a string that is the input if the input is 6 characters or less, and the first 3 characters + "..." if it's greater than 6.

The first question is fairly straight forward. The second... that's an exercise for the reader.

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Here are a couple of somewhat evil questions. I'd never ask them, but these are my favourites from discussions with my colleagues:

1. Given an RBGA pixel, with 8 bits per channel packing into a 32-bit integer, write a function which does saturated addition on two pixels.

2. In Java, write a function which takes a string and returns a string that is the input if the input is 6 characters or less, and the first 3 characters + "..." if it's greater than 6.

The first question is fairly straight forward. The second... that's an exercise for the reader.

The second one isn't that hard... is it?

Pseudocode

String Foo(String bar)
{
    if (bar.Length &lt;= 6)
   	 return bar

    return bar.Substring(0, 3) + "..."
}

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MrA really? lol


String Shortten(String text) {
return text.Length <= 6 ? text : text.Substring(0, 3) + "...";
}
[/CODE]

Hehe. I guess I wasn't clear. It's a trick question (and arguably, poorly defined), and according to my friend, no-one's been able to answer it. I certainly couldn't answer it, but at least I understand why I can't answer it.

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Hehe. I guess I wasn't clear. It's a trick question (and arguably, poorly defined), and according to my friend, no-one's been able to answer it. I certainly couldn't answer it, but at least I understand why I can't answer it.

Huh? How is it a trick question? Seems extremely straight forward... what are we missing here?

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The question was for a game programming position, where the ability to design algorithms that work with points and vectors in 2D and 3D space is very important. Actually I was tasked to design such an algorithm during my internship there.

Also the answer to that is not particularly difficult:

A circle is defined by a center point and a radius. To find the center point, find Xmax, Xmin, Ymax, Ymin in your cloud of points, and your center is the point in the middle of that (Xmin + ((Xmax - Xmin) / 2), Ymin + ((Ymax - Ymin) / 2)).

Now the radius is the smallest one that ensures the circle contains all the points: it therefore has to be as long as the distance to the furthest away point. The distance from the center to a point is simply the norm of the Point-Center vector. Go over your cloud of points, calculate the distance from the center for each, select the largest. Done.

Actually, the problem is considerably harder than that. How do you know that aabb center is always the center of the smallest circle? It's not clear that there's a relationship between the two. Here's an example:

47gSc.png

The blue points are the point cloud, and the white subdivided box is their aabb (note the blue point in the upper-right corner). The red circle is the one described by your algorithm with red dot as center; the green circle with green dot as center is smaller (possibly the smallest) and still covers all points. Anyway, this problem is called the minimum bounding circle, and there are a lot of ways to approach it but it is basically an optimization problem.

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Anyway, this problem is called the minimum bounding circle, and there are a lot of ways to approach it but it is basically an optimization problem.
I hadn't thought of that, so thanks for the explanation. That said, now that I think about it, I don't think they mentionned it had to be smallest possible circle during the interview. That would've been kinda hard for an internship position. :p
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Hehe. I guess I wasn't clear. It's a trick question (and arguably, poorly defined), and according to my friend, no-one's been able to answer it. I certainly couldn't answer it, but at least I understand why I can't answer it.

The trick is that the naive algorithm only works with a monospace font. The extreme case, a string composed of 'i's, will hold much more letters than normal text in a certain amount of pixels. So you have to measure the text if you want to do it correctly.

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Image: Jonathan Borba via Pexels Signal accused the UK government of using child safety and device-level explicit content ban as a cover for mass surveillance. Calling the plan "dystopian," Signal warned that it violates everyone's fundamental right to privacy. The messaging platform believes that the government should keep children "safe" and "protected," but it should do so through social services and education. Fears of social media regulation Image via DepositPhotos.com More governments across the globe are tightening their grip on social media and bringing stricter regulations in the name of child safety. Bluesky COO, Rose Wang, warned that social media regulations could destroy competition from small startups and that heavy regulatory compliance costs favor deep-pocketed tech giants while locking out new entrants. Our Features Image: Pexels Our coffee-powered team publishes a platter of editorials, opinion posts, and guides. Here's what they got for the week: UK **** blockers are a looming privacy disaster, we must be able to see the source code This week in software news Image: Proton Catch up on some of the latest software news updates that arrived throughout the week: Dark clouds over PC makers: Building on our report from last month, Dell officially acknowledged that its own remediation software was causing BSOD issues and unexpected system restarts. HP is also facing equally frustrating issues involving recent Windows Secure Boot updates on Windows 11. Controversial icon: Spotify finally removed the disco ball icon from its app and replaced it with the familiar flat green logo after weeks of mixed reactions online. While some people don't like the new design, the retro, three-dimensional look has generated a following of its own. Even other brands are coming up with their versions of the disco logo. NVIDIA fixes stuff: A new hotfix driver 610.52 fixes various issues related to monitors and displays, noting that G-SYNC-related frame pacing troubles should now be resolved on Ada Lovelace GPUs. The feedback thread also points out that the hotfix patches a BSOD issue. FIFA World Cup tracker: Opera is redesigning its Android browser with a built-in football tracker for the upcoming World Cup in the US. The new homepage is now "more immersive" with easier access to common browser features. Command line for Proton: The Swiss technology company has launched a command line version of the Proton Drive, which you can use to manage your encrypted files directly from a terminal across all major platforms, including Windows, macOS, and Linux. This week in hardware news Image: Thermaltake Catch up on some of the latest software news updates that arrived throughout the week: Intel and AMD PCs in one case: Thermaltake's CAPO X dual-system chassis brings you the best of both worlds by supporting two microATX (mATX) motherboards and up to two 360 mm AIO liquid coolers. If you want ideas, maybe you can use one as your main PC and another as an AI agent. Google Tensor production: While TSMC will remain the lead producer, the search giant is reportedly in talks with Samsung to hand over part of the production of its next-generation Tensor AI chips. The upcoming TPUs are reportedly codenamed “Icefish” and will be produced using Samsung's 2-nanometer process technology. Lethal fake phone chargers: UK-based consumer rights organization Which? has warned that "potentially lethal knock-off chargers" are still being sold on online marketplaces, including Amazon and eBay, despite the dangers of such chargers having been exposed. This week in Google News Image: Google Catch up on some of the latest Google news updates that arrived throughout the week: Sliding into DMs: You might remember that YouTube had a direct messaging feature back in the day. It's now rolling out a revamped direct messaging inbox that lets you share Shorts, videos, and live streams and have conversations about them. New in NotebookLM: The AI-powered note-taking app got some new agentic capabilities and more advanced reasoning, thanks to support for Gemini 3.5 and Antigravity. NotebookLM can now generate outputs in more formats, making it easier to start new projects with less information. This week in Apple News Image: Apple Catch up on some of the latest Apple news updates that arrived throughout the week: WWDC 2026: This week was all about Apple's annual developer conference, where the iPhone-maker finally unveiled an upgraded Siri AI and a platter of new Apple Intelligence features. Siri AI now has a cross-platform app, which is supported on select models of iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro. What's different about WWDC: I wrote a detailed feature this week discussing how Apple changed the WWDC keynote this year, blurring the lines between its operating systems. Apple didn't have dedicated segments for its operating systems this year and didn't even publish the official press releases. Liquid Glass slider (finally): It's that time of the year when Apple previews fresh updates for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, and other platforms. A new transparency slider for Liquid Glass is coming to iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27 Golden Gate. Is your device supported?: If you're wondering whether your Apple device supports the new developer beta builds, you can check the respective compatibility lists for iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27, and watchOS 27. Siri AI not coming to Europe: Yes, that's true due to complications related to the Digital Markets Act (DMA). While Apple penned a blog post to tell its side of the story, a European Commission spokesperson told Neowin that the DMA does not prohibit Apple from launching its services in the EU; the company is simply required to comply with the law. New child safety features: Apple announced a trove of new safety features for kids, including a simpler setup experience for parents, Ask to Browse, Time Allowances, and a redesigned Screen Time UI. Parents can now visit a new website to find answers to common questions around child safety features. More cloud power: Apple's Private Cloud Compute cloud infrastructure will now run beyond its own data centers for the first time. It's working with Google and NVIDIA to run new Apple Intelligence workloads on Google Cloud systems powered by NVIDIA GPUs. This week in Meta news Catch up on the latest Meta news updates that arrived throughout the week: Data from outside: Meta is rolling out a new update globally to personalize your AI responses and primary feeds using data from outside businesses. It already targets ads based on shopping activity, but the latest development enables it to personalize other "parts of your experience." There is a toggle in the Settings to disable activity from other businesses; however, it won't prevent companies from sending your data to Meta. Level playing field: The European Commission has ordered the social media giant to restore access to WhatsApp for third-party AI chatbots, including ChatGPT and Copilot. Meta previously blocked rival AI chatbots from operating on WhatsApp, prompting the Commission to launch an antitrust investigation. Spying on users: On the flip side, WhatsApp accused the Israeli cyber-intelligence firm, NSO Group, of deploying a fresh wave of targeted "spear phishing" attacks against its users, which were thwarted by WhatsApp's security teams. Reorder profile grid: Adding some customization for the profile grid feature, Instagram now lets you rearrange posts in your profile without deleting and reuploading content. Go to your profile and long-press any thumbnail to find the "Reorder grid" option. This week in AI news Catch up on the latest artificial intelligence news updates that arrived throughout the week: Claude RAM hogger: Windows users are getting infuriated by Claude Desktop's hidden 1.8GB Hyper-V VM bug, which spins up if you use Claude Cowork or agent mode even once. It shows a Vmmem process in Task Manager, indicating 0% CPU usage but 1.8GB of RAM usage. Claude Fable 5: The new state-of-the-art AI model from Anthropic beats OpenAI's ChatGPT-5.5 in multiple AI benchmarks. Claude Fable 5 sits above the Opus models and outperforms most other generally available models across knowledge work, vision, scientific research, and more. However, the model was abruptly suspended after receiving an export control directive from the US government. Stack Overflow for AI agents: The popular Q&A platform has launched Stack Overflow for Agents in beta, which AI agents can use to share, find, and reuse coding knowledge. It explained that AI agents operate in isolation, creating an Ephemeral Intelligence Gap, and valuable tokens are wasted on something another agent has already solved. Upgrading Codex: OpenAI is buying a company called Ona, which makes secure cloud execution and orchestration technology for developers. The ChatGPT-maker aims to make Codex agents run for days without being tied to a local machine or an active session. It also announced a new developer mode in Chrome. This week in open-source news Catch up on some of the latest open-source and Linux updates that arrived throughout the week: Linux 7.1 rc7: Linux Torvalds dropped an optimized rc7 with crucial fixes for AMD and laptop hardware. He said that a stable version of Linux 7.1 could arrive next week, adding that the latest RC is not small, but smaller than recent releases. Alpine Linux 3.24: The latest Alpine Linux release added support for COSMIC Desktop, Linux 6.18, IPv6 installer support, automatic serial console configuration for headless setups, and major package updates and removals. This week in Microsoft News Microsoft had to shut down more than 70 GitHub repos after they were compromised by malware, Teams is getting a controversial tracking feature that users may hate, and the company explained why the new update makes PowerToys faster. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in gaming The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. On the Epic Games Store, the new titles on display for grabs include Warhammer 40K Speed Freeks and The Ouroboros King. NVIDIA GeForce NOW's summer sale lowered the prices of both the Performance and Ultimate membership options for a limited time period. Meanwhile, the Xbox Free Play Days brought Undead Labs' post-apocalyptic title State of Decay 2, as well as two Team17-published titles. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Dragon's Dogma 2: Dark Arisen expansion to bring snowy region, new updates also coming Playground drops 30 minutes of Fable gameplay, shows off life sim and morality system Playground Games confirms Forza Horizon 6 save wipe bug Doom: The Dark Ages Revelations expansion gives the Slayer a brutal Chain Spear State of Decay 3 is out in 2027, reveals Plague Nests with new co-op gameplay trailer From the review corner This week, Taras got his hands on the DuRoBo Krono portable e-ink reader, which comes with a $279 price tag. It's a smartphone-sized device with a rotating dial, sitting somewhere between premium and cheap in terms of build quality. Speaking of the pros, the physical controls are cool, the smart dial is useful, the battery life is good, and Android 15 has no-nonsense software. On the flip side, the device lacks software customization, the built-in AI needs improvement, the smart dial is a bit wobbly, and there is no ambient light sensor. EA Sports UFC 6 EA Sports UFC 6 does a better job at onboarding new players than most fighting games, according to Pulasthi's detailed review. The game comes with rewarding combat systems, top-notch animation, impressive impact physics, and visible damage on fighters. However, the menus lag a lot, grappling isn't very fun, and the flow state feels a little misplaced. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: GIGABYTE Radeon RX 9070 XT Gaming OC ICE 16G - $649.99 (13% off) 1TB Samsung T7 Portable SSD - $189.98 (31% off) AirPods Pro 3 - $179 ($50 off) Edifier R1280Ts Powered Bookshelf Speakers - $129.99 (24% off) To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
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