Programming interviews

Discussion in 'App Development' started by Aquarians, Oct 3, 2017.

  1. Sig

    Sig

    That's an interesting assertion, you have experience in this area? Pretty sure I read something like this on Breitbart or Infowars, could that be your source? Could perhaps the idiocy of using an SAT test to evaluate a mid-level software dev be the reason, occam's razor and all, even though you want to get a dig in at political correctness?
     
    #41     Oct 9, 2017
  2. truetype

    truetype

    Sorry, I don't follow those publications.
     
    #42     Oct 9, 2017
  3. Sig

    Sig

    So your source was?
     
    #43     Oct 9, 2017
  4. Well, IQ or penis size, your opinion on what matters is irrelevant unless you build your profitable business doing what you preach. Just because so far there's no highly competitive and successful enterprise constructed on anything else than abject totalitarianism and psychopathy, does not preclude them from existing from now on. As one knows, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

    If you're not familiar with the reason why the top level executive positions are dominated (possibly 100%) by psychopaths, read "Gervais hierarchy" and you'll understand. You'll also understand who the "hiring managers" are - the clueless bunch - and why they're hopelessly so. And realize that if by mid age you're still shoveling, it means you're definitely not fit for cluelessness, which leaves you with two options: you're either a loser or a psychopath.

    https://www.ribbonfarm.com/2009/10/07/the-gervais-principle-or-the-office-according-to-the-office/
     
    #44     Oct 9, 2017
    fan27 likes this.
  5. Honestly, my IQ out of the cold (think penis size when you get out of cold water) is about 110. Which, retards who only got *that* far or perhaps some 10 points more with sucking devices and expensive training, think it's all there is.

    It's not even an average. It's a WORST CASE SCENARIO, you imbeciles!
     
    #45     Oct 9, 2017
  6. That being said I dunno about 700 IQ point bovines in charge of hiring $7k ones. The universe is expanding but perhaps not at a higher rate than we can manage.

    Obviously I'm a $7M idiot who honestly thinks can save this world, but I've seen worse.
     
    #46     Oct 9, 2017
  7. In the sense that $7M per month or per year? Well, if you can afford either of those, it doesn't make a difference.
     
    #47     Oct 9, 2017
  8. That guy who doesn't make much of a difference is me. In the meantime I'm working for 70 IQ guys pretending they're 100.
     
    #48     Oct 9, 2017
  9. #49     Oct 9, 2017
  10. OK, ignore last 5 posts, that's beer wisdom :p

    Continuing with programming interviews, the second major problem can be summarized as "probability". One fallacy when applying to jobs is that the employer thinks "he's only hiring the best" and the employees who passed the interviews and get hired do not consider themselves lucky but extremely capable.

    When you apply for a single job along with 1000 other suckers, as it's the case with superstars like Google or big banks, there are several things in effect:
    - 50% of them are "below average" and 50% are "above average". Average of the guys who apply, not of programmers in general, and I suspect some 90% of the applicants are *above* industry average. So leaving aside the 100 "below industry average", you're already competing with 900 above it.
    - 10% of them are very good. As in fit for any practical purpose, really. But that still means 100 freaking gladiators battling for a position where only one survives!

    So from this point on it becomes a pissing contest who gets selected because frankly, you could just throw a dart at the people names and hire the one you hit. And I suspect it's one of the reasons that secrecy and ambiguity enters place, the interviewers just don't grok that the process is no longer deterministic at this point.
    Even if you're one of the 100 tough guys, getting hired is just a pure gamble. A gamble with 1% odds!
    Couple that with the amount of time invested in completing various stages of the interview and you get a situation where unless you're desperate or simply don't have better things to do, it's just not worth considering.

    At least not for me, I prefer working on my options trading software and researching strategies than wasting my time on interviews. And no, it doesn't mean I'm not very capable if I get rejected, but it does mean I'm stupid if I don't realize there are much better uses for my time than playing the corporate interviews lottery.
     
    Last edited: Oct 10, 2017
    #50     Oct 10, 2017