ChatGPT Alternative for Coding Interviews
ChatGPT is powerful, but it's not designed for stealth interview assistance. Here's why Ofradr is better.
Problems with Using ChatGPT in Interviews
- Requires switching tabs (detectable)
- Visible browser window
- Slow copy-paste workflow
- Not optimized for coding problems
Ofradr: Built for Interview Stealth
- Uses GPT-4 (and Claude) behind the scenes
- Invisible overlay - no tab switching needed
- Screenshot-to-solution workflow
- Optimized prompts for coding problems
Why ChatGPT alone falls short in interviews
ChatGPT is powerful, but in a live interview or proctored exam it's a visible browser tab or app. Alt-tabbing to it triggers focus-loss flags, and on a screen share the interviewer sees it immediately. You also have to retype the problem and copy answers back, which is slow and obvious.
Ofradr wraps strong AI assistance in an invisible overlay: capture the question on screen, get the answer in place, and stay on the same window the whole time.
- No visible tab to switch to or get caught sharing
- Screenshot the problem instead of retyping it
- Answers appear in a private overlay, not a recorded window
- Offline local-model support for locked-down environments
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a ChatGPT alternative that's invisible during interviews?
Yes. Ofradr provides ChatGPT-style coding help through a native overlay that doesn't appear in screen shares, recordings, or proctoring — unlike ChatGPT in a browser tab.
Can interviewers tell if I'm using ChatGPT?
Often yes — switching to a ChatGPT tab causes focus-loss flags and is visible on screen share. Ofradr avoids both by keeping assistance off the captured surface.