Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google’s new website wants to make your job interviews easy

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google might be a go-to place for looking for employment and advice on writing resumes, but the search engine giant now has one more way to help you land your dream job.

Recently launched by Google was “Interview Warmup,” a website that can help make practicing for your job interviews easy. Just like the name suggests, Interview Warmup is a quick way to prepare for job interviews. Rather than record yourself with your webcam, or stand in front of a mirror, it has three core ways of helping you: Practicing, insights, as well as improving or helping build confidence.

Recommended Videos

The website is part of the Grow with Google program, which offers training, tools, and resources to help you grow your skills, career, or business. It works on all the major desktop platforms and web browsers, and even on mobile platforms, too.

using google's job interview tools
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Using Interview Warmup is quite easy. You can pick a job field that you want to practice for, out of the generic choices like data analytics, e-commerce, IT support, project management, UX design, or general. You’ll then have to answer five questions or choose from a list of background or situational questions.

Obviously, you’ll next have to speak up to answer or type your answer using the keyboard. Google is quick to mention that everything you say will be private to you, and nothing will be saved or stored. Answers can be edited at any time if a transcript comes out wrong.

Once you answer, you can save all of your answers or copy them to your clipboard for future reference. Powered by artificial intelligence, each answer field will also show you different insights, such as terms, most used words, or talking points to keep the interview going. There’s no grading scale, and you can even redo a specific interview question if you feel like you made a mistake. The idea is that Google wants to give you feedback.

As cool as this is, Google isn’t the only major technology company that wants to help make it easy for you to find employment. Microsoft, for example, has built-in resume tools in Microsoft Word that can pull suggestions for various jobs from LinkedIn.

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
Your hard drive is giving away your browsing habits and websites can see it
A new attack called FROST lets malicious websites spy on your open tabs and apps by tracking your SSD activity.
An SSD data port.

Your browsing habits may not be as private as you think, even with all the right precautions in place. According to Ars Technica, security researchers have uncovered a new attack technique that lets a malicious website figure out which other sites and apps you have open. You do not need to click anything, download anything, or grant any permission; just visiting the page is enough.

How can websites spy on your browsing activity through hard drive?

Read more
iOS 27 leak shows off Siri’s minimalist redesign and new tricks within a dedicated app
Bloomberg's iOS 27 leak reveals the most ambitious Siri redesign in the assistant's history.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple’s biggest Siri overhaul in nearly 15 years is taking shape ahead of WWDC 2026 on June 8, 2026, and the first detailed look at what the revamped assistant might look like comes from Bloomberg. 

These aren’t official images or promotional materials, but renders based on the information that the outlet has collected from its sources. Furthermore, Apple often tests multiple designs and versions before releasing the final version of a product, so it could still differ. 

Read more
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon C chip eyes dirt-cheap laptops as MacBook Neo redraws budget lines
A $300 laptop that actually works? Qualcomm thinks it has the answer.
Qualcomm Snapdragon C

Budget laptops have always been a compromise. You either get a machine that struggles to keep up with your browser tabs or one that dies before lunch. And almost all of them feature a cheap plastic body. Qualcomm wants to change that with its new Snapdragon C Platform, a chip built specifically for entry-level laptops starting at $300.

Qualcomm says that the Snapdragon C is designed for students, families, and small businesses that need a reliable, everyday machine without breaking the bank. Devices powered by this chip will handle web browsing, video streaming, productivity apps, and video calls without a hitch. 

Read more