The process was extremely slow with multiple delays and reschedulings. It took about two months from applying to get a decision. For the interviews: the first interview was the same as the other reviews described, a quick screening to make sure that you can speak English fluently. The second step had three Codility questions. This is where I thought the process started to break down. Front end developers typically aren't taught and don't use the kind of complex sorting algorithms that Codility likes to use in its tests, and Codility isn't a very friendly platform to work with if you're using JavaScript, which it wasn't designed for.
Despite that, I passed the algorithms test with a good score and moved onto the third step, a live coding exercise over Skype. This fell flat. The question I got was easy, but it was one that you'd usually solve with a framework or a templating library, which you weren't allowed to use. Trying to solve it in under 20 minutes in raw JS over Skype didn't go too well - I ran out of time, and therefore was declined as a candidate. It didn't help that the interviewer was in another country, it was late at night on that end, and the wifi on that end kept dropping sound and the screen sharing connection.
All in all, the drawn out and disorganized interviewing process left me thinking that it was basically a waste of time. If it's this much of a headache just getting on the list for projects, you have to think that the projects and company support, if you do, are probably going to have the same kinds of issues. The interviewer was nice enough to say that I could reapply in three months, but I doubt that I will.